The Asian Tsunami, academics and academic research
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
In their editorial in the March 2005 issue of this journal, James Sidaway and Peggy Teo (2005:2) invited papers “that go beyond the (dramatic and disturbing) immediate media coverage of the tsunamis to unpick myriad geographies of the event, context and aftermath”. In another editorial, in Environment & Planning D, Jim Glassman (2005:168) highlights two “missing story lines”, namely “institutional and social culpability in failing to reduce the risks to less privileged Acehnese and Thais” and “the opportunistic use of Asian suffering by US leaders” (p. 169-70). Indeed, the disaster is being, and will be “read” – or used – by geographers to make a wide range of points – political, ethical, developmental and methodological. We suspect that they will share one thing: a desire to get away from, or beyond, the notion of the tsunami as “just” a natural disaster, albeit one of vast scale. In this intervention we discuss our own research agendas in the wake of the tsunami, and return to a set of comparatively well-worn themes at the interface of utility, positionality and ethics (see Proctor, 1998; Hamnett, 2003; and the special issue, SJTG, 2003, for related debates). As will become clear, while they may be well-worn this is for a good reason: they demand consideration every time a researcher steps into the field, and particularly one as potentially sensitive and difficult as this.
Journal
Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography
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26
ISBN/ISSN
1467-9493
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Issue
2
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Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
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EISSN
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DOI
10.1111/j.0129-7619.2005.00216.x