Disaster Resilience Research Group

Working with government and industry to collectively strengthen society's resilience to disasters.

About

The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 identifies the need to promote cooperation between research entities and those involved in emergency management to develop new products that enhance disaster resilience.

The Australian National Disaster Risk Reduction Framework (PDF 4.4MB) translates the first three Sendai Framework priorities into action for the Australian context with a requirement to strengthen the link between research and operational expertise.

The Disaster Resilience Research Group accepts these challenges and in doing so, aims to enhance their research leadership in disaster resilience both locally in Tasmania, nationally in Australia and internationally.

The Disaster Resilience Research Group spans three colleges at the University of Tasmania. It is based within the College of Arts, Law and Education and run collaboratively with the College of Sciences and Engineering with researchers from the College of Health and Medicine. We are locally based but have a global reach working with a range of stakeholders that represent the public, private and not-for-profit sectors. Our goal is to work with government and industry to collectively strengthen society's resilience to disasters.

Email: Steven.Curnin@utas.edu.au

Research snapshot

The Disaster Resilience Research Group is collaborating with the Department of Premier and Cabinet to identify a horizon scanning framework that will align with the priorities from the National Disaster Risk Reduction Framework to integrate a suite of plausible future scenarios into Tasmania’s Emergency Risk Management prevention and preparedness planning program.

In partnership with The Department of Police, Fire and Emergency Management, the University of Tasmania assisted in undertaking the 2021 Tasmanian State Disaster Risk Assessment. This project enables an all hazard and multi-disciplinary understanding of disaster risks affecting Tasmania. The Disaster Resilience Research Group led a multi-disciplinary team from the University of Tasmania to ensure that specific research subject matter expertise was encompassed into the project.

On behalf of the Department of Premier and Cabinet, the Disaster Resilience Research Group completed a project that explored how communities impacted by the 2018/19 Tasmanian bushfires recovered in the context of responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. The findings from this research project can be generalised to the broader Australian recovery efforts.

The Disaster Resilience Research Group worked with the Tasmanian Premier's Economic and Social Recovery Advisory Council (PESRAC) and Secretariat to use stretch-thinking techniques in COVID-19 recovery planning for a 3-year time horizon. This project also worked closely with the PESRAC Secretariat and Tasmanian peak bodies to identify strategic opportunities in the state's recovery planning.

This research grant was awarded by the Tasmanian State Emergency Management Program to assist the Tasmanian State Emergency Management Committee in delivering programs to address significant disaster resilience initiatives. The project developed a practical guide so practitioners in the public and not-for-profit sectors can enhance collaboration in the recovery phase of emergency management. The project worked with stakeholders from Tasmanian not-for-profit organisations and those representing multiple public sector agencies that were involved in the 2016 Tasmanian floods.

News and events

26 June 2023

The Disaster Resilience Research Group was invited by Mel Bush from the ABC to participate in the Tasmania Saturday’s radio program. Darryl spoke on the Saturday morning show about the Natural Hazards Research Australia flood study project, and specifically the Northern Tasmania flood project he is leading. The interview focussed on how the work feeds into broader federal agendas for disaster preparedness.

24 March 2023

The Disaster Resilience Research Group was invited by the Australian Department of Home Affairs to present at the inaugural Cyber and Infrastructure Security Conference. The conference was attended by 550 in person participants and 1000 participants that joined via the live stream. Steve provided an interactive presentation titled ‘Assessing Your Organisation’s Resilience’ that was based on the work the University of Tasmania was conducting updating the Australian Government publication, Organisation Resilience Good Business Guide.

From research to education

One of the fundamental goals of our research is to translate the knowledge created into educating and training people about disaster resilience. We have used our research and expertise in this area to develop a suite of undergraduate and postgraduate units aligned to the topic of disaster resilience.

Policy alignment

The Australian National Disaster Risk Reduction Framework (PDF 4.4MB) outlines a national, comprehensive approach to proactively reducing disaster risk, now and into the future. The following table outlines how our research is contributing to the four priorities identified in the 'Framework' at a micro-level.


National Priority 1: Understand disaster risk
Strategy D: Integrate plausible future scenarios into planning
Contribution: During the discussion exercises in our decision making workshops, participants explore scenario-based risk assessments that are designed to inform complex decisions that are used for navigating future uncertainties.


National Priority 2: Accountable decisions
Strategy C: Build the capability and capacity of decision-makers to actively address disaster risk in policy, program and investment decisions
Contribution: Our research is producing guidance materials to build the capability of decision-makers, so they can manage their cognitive limitations when addressing current and future disaster risks and the potential impacts within their area of responsibility.


National Priority 3: Enhanced investment
Strategy D: Identify additional current and future potential funding streams
Contribution: Together with our end users, we are proactively utilising existing funding pathways available at the BNHCRC for utilisation projects that transition research outcomes to changed practices that meet the needs of organisations with a role in disaster governance arrangements.


National Priority 4: Governance, ownership and responsibility
Strategy D: Create clear governance pathways for pursuing disaster risk reduction projects
Contribution: Our research investigating creativity in decision complexity is aligning these decision-making practices across the public, private and not-for-profit sectors to allow a holistic approach to prioritising disaster risks and formulating potential actions to reduce and manage them.

Publications

A full range of publications relevant to the Disaster Resilience Research Group can be found on our researcher's full profiles linked above. These include journal articles, books, chapters in books, reviews, conference publications, thesis, and other public outputs.