2012 Winter Lectures: Hazards, disasters, risks and responses: Auckland are you ready? 
Lectures
Saturday, 28 July 2012, 1:00 p.m. thru Tuesday, 21 August 2012, 2:00 p.m.
Location:
At Maidment Theatre, 8 Alfred Street, City Campus
Speaker:
Associate Professor Asaad Shamseldin, Associate Professor Charles Clifton, Dr Jan Lindsay, Associate Professor Peter O’Connor,Associate Professor Carol Mutch & Dr Ljubica Mamula-Seadon
Department:
The last two years brought the unpredictable nature of New Zealand’s
natural and man-made hazards to the fore. Christchurch’s major
earthquake and its devastating aftershocks, the Pike River mine
disaster, the Rena oil spill, heavy rain and snow falls, tornadoes and
other unexpected events overstretched the country’s infrastructure,
caused loss of life and livelihood, and tested the strength and
resilience of everyday New Zealanders. This series of lectures explores
New Zealand’s disasters - the risks we face and the responses we make to
those risks. Experts and scholars from, or connected with, The
University of Auckland will share their knowledge and skills on a
selection of topics from geology and engineering to media and education.
Lecture 2, Tuesday 24 July
Clive Manley, Auckland Council: Risk and response in Auckland.
The national strategy for civil defence and emergency management is
for a resilient New Zealand. Auckland has a third of New Zealand's
population, yet how prepared are we to respond to and recover from a
major disaster? What is being done to build the resilience which will be
needed in Auckland? What have we learnt from Christchurch?
Lecture 3, Tuesday 31 July (Panel discussion: Understanding the risks - tsunami, floods, earthquakes and volcanoes)
Featuring:
Associate Professor Asaad Shamseldin, Faculty of Engineering: Tsunami hazard and mitigation in New Zealand.
New Zealand with its long coastline and its location in the Pacific
ring of fire is vulnerable to tsunami damage. Recent research indicates
the risks of structure damage from tsunamis in New Zealand are no less
significant than those associated with earthquakes. This lecture will
provide a historical review of tsunamis in New Zealand and other parts
of the world. It will also discuss the current research activities at
The University of Auckland aiming at providing a better scientific
understanding of the interaction of tsunami with infrastructure.
Associate Professor Charles Clifton, Faculty of Engineering: Earthquake and fire risk.
The earthquakes that have struck Christchurch since September 2010
have shattered lives, buildings and infrastructure. The earthquakes have
also given structural engineers a unique opportunity to learn the
effects of severe earthquakes on buildings and infrastructure. It
provides valuable lessons about the performance of actual buildings from
old to modern, built from a wide range of structural materials and with
many structural forms. The lessons are relevant to all of New Zealand
and will be the focus of this lecture.
Dr Jan Lindsay, Faculty of Science: Volcanic risk.
Although Auckland is considered to be one of New Zealand’s most
tectonically stable areas, it is built on and around the potentially
active Auckland Volcanic Field (AVF), which comprises around 50 small
volcanoes and has been active for the last quarter of a million years.
The most recent eruption in the AVF occurred 550 years ago, producing
the island of Rangitoto, and was witnessed by early Maori. The region
also experiences low-level tectonic seismicity, and is at risk of ash
fall from more distal volcanoes. Although the volcanoes in Auckland are
relatively small and their eruptions have been infrequent, the risk
associated with future activity is very high, given Auckland’s high
physical and economic vulnerability.
Lecture 4, Tuesday 7 August
Associate Professor Peter O’Connor, Faculty of Education: Understanding human responses - ‘a teaspoon of light’.
Peter led a team of teachers and artists from The University of
Auckland to work with Christchurch children within days of the 22
February earthquake. The programme was named The Teaspoon of Light after
a young child during one of the workshops was asked what she thought
would help repair a torn cloth of dreams. Her response: “A teaspoon of
light from the darkest tunnel would help as even a small amount of light
can go through everything.” More than 3,000 children across
Christchurch have taken part in Peter’s arts based workshops. The New
Zealand UNESCO Commission has funded a further phase of work, which is
about preparing teachers internationally for work in past or ongoing
trauma sites.
Lecture 5, Tuesday 14 August
Associate Professor Carol Mutch, Faculty of Education: Media responses - from information to interaction.
As the dramas of the past two years unfolded and played out on our
television screens, Carol found herself right in the midst of two of
them - the Canterbury earthquakes and the Pike River mine disaster. Her
experience as a researcher meant that even while coping herself and
supporting others, she couldn't help but collect material that would one
day be collated and analysed to add to our understanding of these
events. The theme of this lecture is how she observed the diverse ways
in which the media - formal and informal - played a crucial part in
disaster response, reporting and recovery.
Lecture 6, Tuesday 21 August
Dr Ljubica Mamula-Seadon, Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency
Management, and Laurie Johnson, of Laurie Johnson Consulting, San
Francisco, US: Policy responses - what have we learned?
The pressures created by the devastating effects of natural and
other large magnitude hazards generate unprecedented expectations in
societies and of governments. The vulnerabilities created in society by
these large-scale hazards combined with interdependencies of production
and supply, urban intensification, population shifts and cultural
changes, newly created societal vulnerabilities force governments to
turn their attention to the capacity of public, private and civic
sectors to withstand disruption, absorb disturbance, act effectively in a
crisis, adapt to changing conditions and grow stronger over time. This
lecture examines those challenges and suggests policy and planning
pathways to surmounting them, using international and New Zealand
examples from Christchurch; Tohoku and Kobe, Japan; San Francisco; and
New Orleans.
Admission is free and open to the public.
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