
A photograph of St James School pupils (left), Ciaran Fox from All Right? (right) and Burwood-Pegasus Community Board Member Tim Baker (front). Baker is presenting the AWA Trails to members of the St James School community. The photograph was taken at the launch of the St James AWA trail at St James School.
A graphic giving the status of Okains Bay School.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "6 September, 2011. St Paul's School, Gayhurst Road".
A graphic giving the status of Le Bons Bay School.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "St Michaels School, 249 Durham Street".
An aerial photograph of Avonside Girls High School.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The new staff room at Avonside Girls High School".
Broken pavement in the Halswell Primary School grounds. Silt from liquefaction can also be seen.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Redcliffs school".
An infographic showing the status of Christchurch schools.
An aerial photograph of Burwood School in Burwood.
A logo for a feature on school closures.
An infographic showing school roll changes in Canterbury.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Lyttelton School".
A photograph of the gates of Halswell School.
Damage to the Christchurch School of Music building.
Damage to the Christchurch School of Music building.
An aerial photograph of Phillipstown School in Phillipstown.
A guide to the statuses given for schools.
Houses teeter over the edge above Redcliffs School.
More now on the Minister of Education sticking with her proposals in February to close or merge earthquake-hit Christchurch schools, with the exception of some New Brighton schools.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Schools around Christchurch return back after a week off due to the earthquake. Banks Avenue school is situated in one of the worst hit areas".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Burnside High School with the University of Canterbury (upper left)".
A banner on the fence of Burwood Primary School expressing the student's appreciation for the efforts of the civil defence, fire service, volunteers and council workers with a banner on their school fence. On each heart-shape note is a personal message from the students.
The new staff room at Avonside Girls High School with the new classrooms in the background. The photograph has been captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Avonside Girls High School staff room. We spoke to two Science teachers who talked enthusiastically about their new Science labs and how great it was to return to their own campus again".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "A group of students eating lunch in front of a classroom at Avonside Girls High School".
On September the 4th 2010 and February 22nd 2011 the Canterbury region of New Zealand was shaken by two massive earthquakes. This paper is set broadly within the civil defence and emergency management literature and informed by recent work on community participation and social capital in the building of resilient cities. Work in this area indicates a need to recognise both the formal institutional response to the earthquakes as well as the substantive role communities play in their own recovery. The range of factors that facilitate or hinder community involvement also needs to be better understood. This paper interrogates the assumption that recovery agencies and officials are both willing and able to engage communities who are themselves willing and able to be engaged in accordance with recovery best practice. Case studies of three community groups – CanCERN, Greening the Rubble and Gap Filler – illustrate some of the difficulties associated with becoming a community during the disaster recovery phase. Based on my own observations and experiences, combined with data from approximately 50 in-depth interviews with Christchurch residents and representatives from community groups, the Christchurch City Council, the Earthquake Commission and so on, this paper outlines some practical strategies emerging communities may use in the early disaster recovery phase that then strengthens their ability to ‘participate’ in the recovery process.
The coordination of actors has been a major focus for much of the research in the disaster relief humanitarian logistics discipline. While much of this literature focuses on the initial response phase, little has been written on the longer term recover phase. As the response phase transitions into the longer term recover phase the number and types of actors change from predominantly disaster relief NGOs to more commercial entities we argue that humanitarian values should still be part of the rebuild phase. It has been noted that humanitarian actors both cooperate and compete at the same time (Balcik, Beamon, Krejci, Muramatsu and Ramirez, 2010), in a form of behavior that can be described as ‘co-opetition’ (Nalebuff and Brandenburger, 1996). We use a case study approach to examine an organizational model used to coordinate civil and commercial actors for the rebuild of the civil infrastructure for Christchurch, New Zealand following a series of devastating earthquakes in 2010/11. For the rebuild phase we argue that ‘co-opetition’ is a key behaviour that allows the blending of humanitarian and commercial values to help communities rebuild to a new normal. While at this early stage our contribution is limited, we eventually hope to fully elaborate on an organisational model that has been created specifically for the tight coordination of commercial actors and its relevance to the rebuild phase of a disaster. Examining the behaviour of co-opetition and the structures that incentivise this behaviour offers insights for the humanitarian logistic field.
A graphic giving the status of North New Brighton School.
A graphic giving the status of Central New Brighton School.