Eriksen, C. CV Aug 2020

Eriksen, C. CV Aug 2020

Last updated: 10 August 2021 CURRICULUM VITAE Christine Eriksen, PhD FRGS Centre for Security Studies, ETH Zürich, Haldeneggsteig 4, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland, [email protected] Education Doctor of Philosophy in Human Geography (Awarded 17 December 2010) Thesis title: Playing with fire? Bushfire and everyday life in changing rural landscapes in Australia University of Wollongong, Australia Master of Arts in Human Geography with Distinction (Awarded 1 December 2004) Thesis title: Why do they burn the bush? Fire as a land management tool in Zambia King’s College London, University of London, United Kingdom Bachelor of Arts with Joint Honours in Geography and Social Anthropology (Awarded 31 July 2003) School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London, United Kingdom Certificate in English Language Teaching for Adults (CELTA) (Awarded 2006) South Thames College, United Kingdom Oxford Cambridge RSA Level 3 Certificate in Off-Site Safety Management (Awarded 2005) Royal Geographical Society (with Institute of British Geographers), United Kingdom Certificate in Natural History (Awarded 2000) Centre for Continuing Education, Edinburgh University, United Kingdom Professional Appointments August 2020 - Ongoing: Senior Researcher, Centre for Security Studies (CSS) ETH Zürich, Switzerland August 2020 – Ongoing: Honorary Senior Lecturer, School of Geography and Sustainable Communities University of Wollongong, Australia May 2018 – July 2020: Senior Lecturer (tenured), School of Geography and Sustainable Communities University of Wollongong, Australia December 2019: Visiting Scholar, Copenhagen Centre for Disaster Research (COPE) University of Copenhagen, Denmark Autumn 2019: Visiting Scholar, Geography Division, School of Environment, Education and Development University of Manchester, England Summer 2019: Visiting Scholar, Centre for Security Studies (CSS) ETH Zürich, Switzerland 2015 – 2018: Senior Research Fellow, Australian Research Council DECRA-awarded Fellowship University of Wollongong, Australia 2013 – 2015: Research Fellow, Australian Centre for Cultural Environmental Research (AUSCCER) & Centre for Environmental Risk Management of Bushfires (CERMB), University of Wollongong, Australia Spring 2011: Visiting Scholar, Department of Geography and Planning California State University, Chico, California, USA 2010 – 2012: Associate Research Fellow, Australian Centre for Cultural Environmental Research University of Wollongong, Australia 2006: In-Country Supervisor, Sustainable Development & Community Enterprise Initiative Sindisa Foundation, Ibo Island, Mozambique 2004 – 2006: Training and Administration Officer, Expedition Advisory Centre Royal Geographical Society with Institute of British Geographers, United Kingdom Curriculum Vitae: Dr Christine Eriksen Publications Books Eriksen, C. and Ballard, S. (2020) Alliances in the Anthropocene: Fire, Plants and People. Singapore: Palgrave Macmillan Pivot. Eriksen, C. (2014) Gender and Wildfire: Landscapes of Uncertainty. New York: Routledge. Book Chapters Eriksen, C. (In Press) ‘Fire.’ In N. Wallenhorst and C. Wulf (Eds.), Handbook of the Anthropocene. Singapore: Springer Nature. Eriksen, C. & Herzog, S. (In Press) ‘Nuclear Waste.’ In N. Wallenhorst and C. Wulf (Eds.), Handbook of the Anthropocene. Singapore: Springer Nature. Eriksen, C. & Turnbull, J. (In Press) ‘Insure the Volume? Sensing air, atmospheres and radiation in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.’ In K. Booth, C. Lucas, & S. French (Eds.), Climate, Society and Elemental Insurance, Routledge. New York: Routledge. McKinnon, S., Eriksen, C. & de Vet, E. (In Press) ‘Between Absence and Presence: Questioning the value of insurance for bushfire recovery.’ In K. Booth, C. Lucas, & S. French (Eds.), Climate, Society and Elemental Insurance. New York: Routledge. Reimer, R. & Eriksen, C. (In Press). Mountain Leadership in Canada: Examining the impacts of gender, safety and climate change. In A. Fletcher & M. Reed (Eds.), Gender and the Social Dimensions of Climate Change: Rural and Resource Contexts of the Global North. New York: Routledge. Lakhina, S. J. & Eriksen, C. (In Press). Seeking Safe Refuge in Regional Australia: Experiences of hazards and practices of safety among women from refugee backgrounds. In A. Fletcher & M. Reed (Eds.), Gender and the Social Dimensions of Climate Change: Rural and Resource Contexts of the Global North. New York: Routledge. Dominey-Howes, D., McKinnon, S., Gorman-Murray, A. & Eriksen, C. (In Press) ‘Sexual and Gender Minorities in Disasters: A review of current knowledge and future research needs.’ In Handbook of Environmental Hazards and Society, eds. McGree, T. & Penning-Rowsell, E. New York: Routledge. Towers, B., Christianson, A. & Eriksen, C. (2019) ‘The Impacts of Wildfire on Children.’ In Encyclopedia of Wildfires and Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Fires, eds. S. Manzello. Cham: Springer. McGee, T. & Eriksen, C. (2018) ‘Defensive Actions and People Preparedness.’ In Encyclopedia of Wildfires and Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Fires, eds. S. Manzello. Cham: Springer. Eriksen, C. & Waitt, G. (2016) ‘Men, Masculinities and Wildfire: Embodied Resistance and Rupture.’ In Men, Masculinities and Disaster, eds. E. Enarson and B. Pease. Chapter 6, pp.69-80. New York: Routledge. Eriksen, C. & Hankins, D. (2015) ‘Colonisation and Fire: Gendered Dimensions of Indigenous Fire Knowledge Retention and Revival.’ In The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development, eds. A. Coles, L. Gray & J. Momsen. Chapter 14, pp.129-137. New York: Routledge. Prior, T. & Eriksen, C. (2012) ‘What does being “well-prepared” for bushfire mean?’ In Wildfire and community: Facilitating preparedness and resilience, eds. D. Paton & F. Tedim. Chapter 10. Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas Publisher. Eriksen, C. & Adams, M. (2010) ‘Indigenous Environmental Knowledge.’ In Encyclopaedia of Geography, eds. B. Warf. pp.1564-1567. Sage Publications. Peer Reviewed Articles Dunn Cavelty, M., Eriksen, C. & Scharte, B. (In Review) ‘When Cyber Security is not Enough: Socio-technical perspectives on cyber resilience’, Journal of Cyber Resilience. McKinnon, S. & Eriksen, C. (2021) ‘Treasures in the Rubble: Memory, home and their (un)making in bushfire.’ Social and Cultural Geography. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2021.1939127 Eriksen, C. & de Vet, E. (2021) ‘Untangling Insurance, Rebuilding, and Wellbeing in Bushfire Recovery.’ Geographical Research, 59(2), pp.228-241. 2/11 Curriculum Vitae: Dr Christine Eriksen de Vet, E., Eriksen, C. & McKinnon, S. (2021) Dilemmas, Decision-Making, and Disasters: Emotions of parenting, safety, and rebuilding in bushfire recovery. Area, 53(2), pp.283-291. Eriksen, C., G. Simon, F. Roth, S. J. Lakhina, B. Wisner, C. Adler, F. Thomalla, A. Scolobig, K. Brady, M. Bründl, F. Neisser, M. Grenfell, L. Maduz & T. Prior (2020) ‘Rethinking the Interplay between Affluence and Vulnerability to aid Climate Change Adaptive Capacity.’ Climatic Change, 162(1), pp.25-39. Eriksen, C., McKinnon, S. & de Vet, E. (2020) ‘Why Insurance Matters: Insights from research post-disaster.’ Australian Journal of Emergency Management, 35(4), pp.42-47. de Vet, E. & Eriksen, C. (2019) ‘When Insurance and Goodwill are not Enough: Bushfire Attack Level (BAL) Ratings, Risk Calculations and Disaster Resilience in Australia’, Australian Geographer, 51(1), pp.35-51. Eriksen, C. (2019) ‘Coping, Caring and Believing: The Embodied Work of Disaster Recovery Workers’, Emotion, Space and Society, 32(100592), (Open Access). de Vet, E., Eriksen, C., Booth, K. & French, S. (2019) ‘An Unmitigated Disaster: Shifting from response and recovery to mitigation for an insurable future’, International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 10(2), pp.179-192 (Open Access). Reimer, R. & Eriksen, C. (2018) ‘The Wildfire Within: Gender, leadership, and wildland fire culture’, International Journal of Wildland Fire, 27, pp.715-726, (Open Access). Eriksen, C. (2019) ‘Negotiating Adversity with Humour: A Case Study of Wildland Firefighter Women’, Political Geography, 68, 139-145 (Open Access). Sword-Daniels, V., Eriksen, C., Hudson-Doyle, E., Alaniz, R., Adler, C., Schenk, T. & Vallance, S. (2018) ‘Embodied Uncertainty: Living with Complexity and Natural Hazards’, Journal of Risk Research, 21(3), pp.290- 307 (Open Access). Eriksen, C. & Wilkinson, C. (2017) ‘Examining Perceptions of Luck in Post-bushfire Sense-making in Australia’, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 24, pp.242-250. Penman, T., Eriksen, C., Horsey, B., Green, A., Cooper, P. & Bradstock, R. (2017) ‘Retrofitting for Wildfire Resilience: What is the Cost?’, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 21, pp.1-10. Eriksen, C. & Simon, G. (2017) ‘The Affluence-Vulnerability Interface: Intersecting Scales of Risk, Privilege and Disaster’, Environment and Planning A, 49(2), pp.293-313, (Open Access). Eriksen, C. (2016) ‘Research Ethics, Trauma and Self-care: Reflections on Disaster Geographies’, Australian Geographer, 48(2), pp.273-278. Eriksen, C., G. Waitt, & C. Wilkinson. (2016) ‘Gendered Dynamics of Wildland Firefighting in Australia.’ Society and Natural Resources, 29(11), pp.1296-1310. Eriksen, C., Penman, T., Horsey, B., & Bradstock, R. (2016) 'Wildfire Survival Plans in Theory and Practice', International Journal of Wildland Fire, 25(4), pp.363-377. Penman, T., Eriksen, C., Horsey, B., & Bradstock, R. (2016) 'How Much Does it Cost Residents to Prepare their Property for Wildfire?', International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 16, pp.88-98. Whittaker, J., Eriksen, C. & Haynes,

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    11 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us