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151. Depoliticising disaster response in a politically saturated context: the case of the 2016–19 droughts in Zimbabwe.

152. The transition from development and disaster risk reduction to humanitarian relief: the case of Yemen during high‐intensity conflict.

153. Actor‐network analysis of community‐based organisations in health pandemics: evidence from the COVID‐19 response in Freetown, Sierra Leone.

154. Talking about volcanoes: institutional narratives, the nature of risk, and Mount Mayon in the Philippines.

155. Humanitarian aid in the archives: introduction.

156. The development of manufactured flood risk: New Orleans' mid-century growth machine and the hurricane of 1947.

157. Disaster risk insurance and catastrophe models in risk-prone small Caribbean islands.

158. Humanitarian aid and local power structures: lessons from Haiti's 'shadow disaster'.

159. Does 'Manna from Heaven' help? The role of cash transfers in disaster recovery—lessons from Fiji after Tropical Cyclone Winston.

160. Assessing community vulnerability to floods and hurricanes along the Gulf Coast of the United States.

161. Return migration after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster: the impact of institutional and individual factors.

162. Flooding and the 'new normal': what is the role of gender in experiences of post‐disaster ontological security?

163. Community resilience and urban planning in tsunami‐prone settlements in Chile.

164. Recovering the status quo: tipping points and earthquake aftermaths in colonial India.

165. The warming city: the increasing risk of summer fires in Delhi.

166. Is male out‐migration associated with women's participation in post‐disaster rebuilding? Evidence from Nepal after the 2015 Gorkha earthquake.

167. Disaster solidarity and survivor ethics: a case study of Hurricane María in Puerto Rico.

168. Conceptualising multiple hazards and cascading effects on critical infrastructures.

169. Divergent dynamics: disasters and conflicts as 'drivers' of internal displacement?

170. In the arena: contesting disaster creation in cities.

171. Disaster aid? Mapping historical responses to volcanic eruptions from 1800–2000 in the English‐speaking Eastern Caribbean: their role in creating vulnerabilities.

172. Returning to normal? 'Building back better' in the Dominican education system after Tropical Storm Erika and Hurricane Maria.

173. Gaining 'authority to operate': student‐led emergent volunteers and established response agencies in the Canterbury earthquakes.

174. Our issue or their issue? Media coverage and framing of the Zika virus epidemic.

175. Help yourself by helping others: self‐interest in appeals for Russian famine relief, 1921–23.

176. Establishing conversation spaces in hastily formed networks: the worst ire in modern Swedish history.

177. Applying the natural disasters vulnerability evaluation model to the March 2011 north-east Japan earthquake and tsunami.

178. Vulnerability assessments as a political creation: tsunami management in Portugal.

179. The Crisis Map of the Czech Republic: the nationwide deployment of an Ushahidi application for disasters.

180. Beyond men and women: a critical perspective on gender and disaster.

181. The cultural politics of mining and natural disaster in Indonesia: by fire and sword.

182. Deconstruction of destruction stories: narrative, inequality, and disasters.

183. Defining disaster resilience: comparisons from key stakeholders involved in emergency management in Victoria, Australia.

184. 'We will never give up': a qualitative study of ethical challenges Syrian health workers face in situations of extreme violence.

185. Checks and balances: a business‐oriented lens on disaster management and warnings.

186. Multi‐scalar and multi‐dimensional conceptions of social capital and mental health impacts after disaster: the case of Hurricane Harvey.

187. On the use of evidence in humanitarian logistics research.

188. Introduction: evidence-based action in humanitarian crises.

189. Towards a complex model of disaster behaviour.

190. Ambivalence towards discourse of disaster resilience.

191. Disaster journalism: fostering citizen and community disaster mitigation, preparedness, response, recovery, and resilience across the disaster cycle.

192. Disaster studies inside out.

193. Rethinking access: how humanitarian technology governance blurs control and care.

194. Reflections on 40 years of Disasters, 1977–2017.

195. Fieldwork after conflict: contextualising the challenges of access and data quality.

196. Household self‐blame for disasters: responsibilisation and (un)accountability in decentralised participatory risk governance.

197. Risk communication and risk perception: lessons from the 2011 floods in Brisbane, Australia.

198. Between international donors and local faith communities: Intermediaries in humanitarian assistance to Syrian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon.

199. Partners under pressure: humanitarian action for the Syria crisis.

200. Persistence of airline accidents.