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Prof Dr Christine Eriksen
Prof Dr Christine Eriksen
Institute of Geography, University of Bern
Verified email at unibe.ch - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Wildfire preparedness, community cohesion and social–ecological systems
T Prior, C Eriksen
Global Environmental Change 23 (6), 1575-1586, 2013
2062013
Bushfire and everyday life: Examining the awareness-action ‘gap’in changing rural landscapes
C Eriksen, N Gill
Geoforum 41 (5), 814-825, 2010
1822010
Why do they burn the ‘bush’? Fire, rural livelihoods, and conservation in Zambia
C Eriksen
Geographical Journal 173 (3), 242-256, 2007
1812007
The gendered dimensions of bushfire in changing rural landscapes in Australia
C Eriksen, N Gill, L Head
Journal of Rural Studies 26 (4), 332-342, 2010
1422010
Gender and Wildfire: Landscapes of Uncertainty
C Eriksen
Routledge: New York, London, 2014
1372014
Embodied Uncertainty: Living with complexity and natural hazards
V Sword-Daniels, C Eriksen, EE Hudson-Doyle, R Alaniz, C Adler, ...
Journal of Risk Research 21 (3), 290-307, 2018
1252018
The Retention, Revival, and Subjugation of Indigenous Fire Knowledge through Agency Fire Fighting in Eastern Australia and California
C Eriksen, DL Hankins
Society and Natural Resources 27 (12), 1288-1303, 2014
1032014
The art of learning: wildfire, amenity migration and local environmental knowledge
C Eriksen, T Prior
International Journal of Wildland Fire 20 (4), 612-624, 2011
962011
Gendered responses to the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires in Victoria, Australia
J Whittaker, C Eriksen, K Haynes
Geographical Research 54 (2), 203-215, 2016
872016
Defining adequate means of residents to prepare property for protection from wildfire
TD Penman, C Eriksen, R Blanchi, M Chladil, AM Gill, K Haynes, ...
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 6, 67-77, 2013
792013
Defining the Importance of Mental Preparedness for Risk Communication and Residents Well-Prepared for Wildfire
C Eriksen, T Prior
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 6, 87-97, 2013
752013
The Affluence–Vulnerability Interface: Intersecting scales of risk, privilege and disaster
C Eriksen, G Simon
Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 49 (2), 293-313, 2017
702017
An unmitigated disaster: Shifting from response and recovery to mitigation for an insurable future
E de Vet, C Eriksen, K Booth, S French
International Journal of Disaster Risk Science 10, 179-192, 2019
542019
Gendered Risk Engagement: Challenging the Embedded Vulnerability, Social Norms and Power Relations in Conventional Australian Bushfire Education
C Eriksen
Geographical Research 52 (1), 23-33, 2014
532014
Rethinking the interplay between affluence and vulnerability to aid climate change adaptive capacity
C Eriksen, GL Simon, F Roth, SJ Lakhina, B Wisner, C Adler, F Thomalla, ...
Climatic Change 162 (1), 25-39, 2020
462020
How much does it cost residents to prepare their property for wildfire?
T Penman, C Eriksen, B Horsey, R Bradstock
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 16, 88-98, 2016
432016
Into the firing line: Civilian ingress during the 2013 ‘‘Red October’’ bushfires, Australia
C Wilkinson, C Eriksen, T Penman
Natural Hazards 80 (1), 521-538, 2016
422016
The relevance of mindfulness practice for trauma-exposed disaster researchers
C Eriksen, T Ditrich
Emotion, Space and Society 17, 63-69, 2015
412015
Retrofitting for wildfire resilience: What is the cost?
TD Penman, C Eriksen, B Horsey, A Green, D Lemcke, P Cooper, ...
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 21, 1-10, 2017
402017
Research Ethics, Trauma and Self-care: Reflections on disaster geographies
C Eriksen
Australian Geographer 48 (2), 273-278, 2017
402017
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