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Williams, Sara; McEwen, Lindsey – Environmental Education Research, 2021
Climate change scenarios project higher flood risk, so knowing how households can increase socio-ecological resilience is essential. Children rarely feature in UK policy guidance about how households prepare for floods, and research is limited about children's roles in local resilience building. Using a participatory action research, child-centred…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Climate, Weather, Natural Disasters
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Ronoh, Steve; Gaillard, J. C.; Marlowe, Jay – Policy Futures in Education, 2017
Every year, worldwide, disasters affect approximately seven million children with disabilities, highlighting their potential vulnerability. Although there is a growing move internationally to promote the rights of children with disabilities, they still receive little attention from disaster risk reduction (DRR) researchers and policy makers. They…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Risk, Correlation, Disadvantaged
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Felix, Erika; Hernandez, Lino A.; Bravo, Milagros; Ramirez, Rafael; Cabiya, Jose; Canino, Glorisa – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2011
We examined the persistence of psychiatric disorders at approximately 18 and 30 months after a hurricane among a random sample of the child and adolescent population (4-17 years) of Puerto Rico. Data were obtained from caretaker-child dyads (N = 1,886) through in person interviews with primary caretakers (all children) and youth (11-17 years)…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Adolescents, Puerto Ricans, Screening Tests
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Tanner, Thomas – Children & Society, 2010
Children and young people are commonly treated in the climate change and disasters literature as victims of natural events requiring protection by adults. This article critiques that narrative, drawing on examples from the Philippines and El Salvador that explore how children's groups have responded to such issues through child-centred…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Climate, Children, Natural Disasters
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Gangi, Jane M.; Barowsky, Ellis – Childhood Education, 2009
More and more children are forced to deal with crushing hardships. The responsibilities of adults worldwide to attend to the affected children have never been greater. In this article, the authors first give an overview of the psychological risks for children who experience war, terrorism, and disaster. They then listen to the voices of children…
Descriptors: Children, Terrorism, Risk, Mental Health
Anderson, Allison – Brookings Institution, 2010
Climate change threatens to undo and even reverse the progress made toward meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and poses one of the most serious challenges to reducing global poverty for the international community. However, the education sector offers a currently untapped opportunity to combat climate change. There is a clear…
Descriptors: Climate, Education, Sustainable Development, Risk
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Mohay, Heather; Forbes, Nicole – Australian Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 2009
A significant number of children suffer long-term psychological disturbance following exposure to a natural disaster. Evidence suggests that a dose-response relationship exists, so that children and adolescents who experience the most intense or extensive exposure to the risk factors for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are likely to develop…
Descriptors: Risk Management, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Natural Disasters, Children
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Garbarino, James; And Others – American Psychologist, 1991
Discusses the developmental challenges faced by children in wartime and similar circumstances. Reviews studies made in several scenes of conflict from World War II to the present. Adults' political ideologies can be sustaining and supportive but may prolong communal violence and curtail moral development. (DM)
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Ideology, Moral Development