Video
Summary
Description
The talk begins with a reflection on how we process disaster-related fear, uncertainty, and triggers—then moves into a practical overview of what disasters are, why they happen, and how myth-driven thinking can either undermine or strengthen preparedness.
Key themes covered:
* Why learning from the past matters: facts, foresight, and purpose-driven resilience
* A UN-style definition of disasters and why impacts can be widespread and long-lasting
* Geomythology (myths as “cultural memory”) and what ancient stories can reveal about earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions
* Technology and risk governance: satellites, sensors, early warning, and where AI can help—and where it can mislead if it relies on old patterns
* A reality check on speed and survival: why you can’t “outrun” many hazards—and what protective action actually looks like
* How inequality becomes vulnerability: why disasters hit hardest among the poor and marginalized groups, and how gender roles shape evacuation and survival decisions
* Correcting common myths, including:
* “No one could have predicted it”
This session is useful for students, emergency managers, humanitarian practitioners, risk communicators, and anyone working on resilience, preparedness, and disaster governance.