Gender, age and other social categories
- Bradshaw, S. (2001) "Reconstructing Roles and Relations: Women’s Participation in Reconstruction in Post-Mitch Nicaragua", Gender and Development, 9(3), pp. 79-87
- Bradshaw, S. (2002) "Exploring the Gender Dimensions of Reconstruction Processes Post-Hurricane Mitch", Journal of International Development, 14(6), pp. 871-879
- Chua, P., Bhavnani, K. and Foran, J. (2000) "Women, Culture, Development: A New Paradigm for development studies?", Ethnic and Racial Studies, 23(5), pp. 820-841
- Cupples, J. (2004a) "Rural Development in El Hatillo, Nicaragua: Gender, Neoliberalism and Environmental Risk", Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 25(3), pp. 343-357
- Cupples, J. (2004b) "Counter-revolutionary women: Gender and Reconciliation in Post-war Nicaragua", Gender and Development, 12(3), pp. 8-18
- Cupples, J. (2005) "Love and Money in an Age of Neoliberalism: Gender, Work and Single Motherhood in Postrevolutionary Nicaragua", Environment and Planning A, 37(2), pp. 305-322
- Enarson, E. and Fordham,M. (2001) “Lines that divide, ties that bind: race, class and gender in women’s flood recovery in the US and UK”, Australian Journal of Emergency Management,15(4), pp. 43-52
Hazard, disaster and climate change paradigms
- Alexander, D. (2002) "From civil defense to civil protection – and back again", Disaster Prevention and Management, 1(3), pp. 209-213
- Boyce, J.K. (2000) "Let Them Eat Risk? Wealth, Rights and Disaster Vulnerability", Disasters, 24(3), pp. 254-261
- Burton, I. and Kates, R.W. (1964) "The perception of natural hazards in resource management", Natural Resources Journal, 3(3), pp. 412-441
- Cannon, T. (1994) "Vulnerability analysis and the explanation of `natural' disasters". In: Varley, A. (ed.) Disasters and Development and Environment, Hoboken, New Jersey, United States: John Wiley & Sons, pp 13-30
- Cannon, T. (2000) "Vulnerability Analysis and Disasters". In: Parker, D. (ed.), Floods, London, United Kingdom: Routledge, pp. 43-55
- Comfort, L., Wisner, B., Cutter, S., Pulwarty, R., Hewitt, K., Oliver-Smith, A., Weiner, J., Fordham, M., Peacock, W. and Krimgold, F. (1999) “Reframing Disaster Policy: The Global Evolution of Vulnerable Communities”, Environmental Hazards, pp. 39-44
- Drabek, T.E. and McEntire, D.A. (2003) "Emergent phenomena and the sociology of disaster: lessons, trends and opportunities from the research literature", Disaster Prevention and Management, 12(2), pp. 97-112
- Fothergill, A., Maestas, E.G.M. and Darlington, J.D. (1999) "Race, Ethnicity and Disasters in the United States: A Review of the Literature", Disasters, 23(2), pp. 156-173
- Johnes, M. (2000) "Aberfan and the Management of Trauma", Disasters, 23(4), pp. 1-17
- Lindell, M.K. and Perry, R.W. (2003) "Preparedness for Emergency Response: Guidelines for the Emergency Planning Process", Disasters, 27(4), pp. 336–350
- McEntire, D.A., Fuller, C., Johnston, C.W. and Weber, R. (2002) "A Comparison of Disaster Paradigms: The Search for a Holistic Policy Guide", Public Administration Review, 62(3), pp. 267-281
- Mitchell, J.K., Devine, N. and Jagger, K. (1989) "A contextual model of natural hazard", The Geographical Review, 79(4), pp. 391-409
- O’Brien, G. and Read, P. (2005) "Future UK emergency management: new wine, old skin?", Disaster Prevention and Management, 14(3), pp. 353-361
- O'Keefe, P., Westgate, K. and Wisner, B. (1976) "Taking the naturalness out of disasters", Nature, 260, pp. 566-567
- Pelling, M. and Uitto, J. (2001) "Small Island Developing States: Natural Disaster Vulnerability and Global Change", Environmental Hazards, 3(2) , pp. 49-62
Mental Health and Social Care in Disasters
- Bracken, Patrick J., Giller, Joan E. and Summerfield, D. (1995) “Psychological Responses to War and Atrocity: The Limitations of Current Concepts”, Social Science and Medicine, 40(8), pp. 1073-1082
- Kenardy, J. (2000) “The current status of psychological debriefing: It may do more harm than good”, British Medical Journal, 321, pp. 1032-1033
- McGillivray, M. (2005) “Measuring non-Economic Well-being Achievement”, Review of Income and Wealth, 51(2), pp. 337–364
- Millar, G. (2005) “The Tsunami’s Psychological Aftermath”, Science, 309(5737), p. 1030
- Ommeren, M. van, Saxena, S., and Saraceno, B. (2005) “Mental and social health during and after acute emergencies: emerging consensus?”, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 83(1), pp. 71-75
- Paton, D. (2007) "Preparing for natural hazards: the role of community trust", Disaster Prevention and Management, 16(3), pp. 370-379
- Schickler, P. (2005) "Achieving Health or Achieving Wellbeing?", Learning in Health and Social Care, 4(4), pp. 217–227
Minimum standards in defining emergency
- Darcy, J. (2004) "Locating Responsibility: The Sphere Humanitarian Charter and Its Rationale", Disasters, 28(2), pp. 112–123
- Dufour, C., de Véronique, G., Maury, H. and Grünewald, F. (2004) "Rights, Standards and Quality in a Complex Humanitarian Space: Is Sphere the Right Tool?", Disasters, 28(2), pp. 124–141
- Macrae, J. (1998) “The Death of Humanitarianism? An Anatomy of the Attack”, Disasters, 22(4), pp. 309-317
- Tong, J. (2003) "Questionable Accountability: MSF and Sphere in 2003", Disasters, 28(2), pp. 176–189
The Disaster Cycle
- McEntire, D. (2000) "Sustainability or Invulnerable Development? Proposals for the Current Shift in Paradigms", Australian Journal of Emergency Management, 15(1), pp. 58-61