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Completed H2020 European Commission

Political Dynamics of Slow-Onset Disasters: Contrasting Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) and Ebola Responses

€219.3K EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Roskilde Universitet
Country Denmark
Start Date Jan 01, 2021
End Date Dec 31, 2022
Duration 729 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 897656
Grant Description

Disasters differ markedly in their speed and pattern of manifestation, which in turn greatly affects how researchers as well asauthorities interpret and respond to them.

While theoretical innovations made by disaster researchers over the last centuryhave almost exclusively been developed for the study of large rapid-onset disasters, disaster assessments reveal thatelusive and slow-onset disasters affect more people on aggregate.

I recently carried out a preliminary study suggesting thatslow-onset disasters have primarily been addressed as something ‘other’ than conventional disasters, and have fallenoutside of the scope of most disaster studies.

We therefore lack theoretical frameworks capable of describing the policydynamics of slow-onset disasters, largely because existing studies focus on individual slow-onset hazards (e.g. climatechange, pandemics or droughts).In this project, I will address this gap by studying the ways in which two types of slow-onset disasters vary through a politicalresponse and health policy lens.

By contrasting the political response trajectories of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) andEbola I will investigate how incremental slow-onset disasters (such as AMR) differ from cyclical ones (such as Ebola) withimplications for policy response.

The project will be hosted at Roskilde University (RUC), Denmark.Empirically, the project employs a health sector focus where the global- and EU-level political response to AMR isjuxtaposed with the Ebola response using process tracing analysis.

This provides both novel insight on how an incrementalslow-onset disaster (AMR) differs from a cyclical one (Ebola), as well as new knowledge on the dynamics of AMR andpandemic policymaking.

The overarching puzzle and ambition of the action is therefore to understand how different slowonsetdisasters vary and which implications this variation has for precautionary planning and policy.

All Grantees

Roskilde Universitet

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