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Shinya Uekusa
Shinya Uekusa
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Canterbury
Verified email at canterbury.ac.nz - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Collaborative autoethnography:“self-reflection” as a timely alternative research approach during the global pandemic
R Roy, S Uekusa
Qualitative Research Journal 20 (4), 383-392, 2020
2262020
Vulnerable and resilient? Immigrants and refugees in the 2010–2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disasters
S Uekusa, S Matthewman
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 22, 355-361, 2017
1192017
Disaster linguicism: Linguistic minorities in disasters
S Uekusa
Language in Society 43 (3), 353-375, 2019
1152019
Rethinking resilience: Bourdieu’s contribution to disaster research
S Uekusa
Resilience 6 (3), 181-195, 2018
602018
Theorizing disaster communitas
S Matthewman, S Uekusa
Disaster Risk Reduction in Asia Pacific: Governance, Education and Capacity …, 2022
452022
Conceptualizing disaster social capital: What it is, why it matters and how it can be enhanced
S Uekusa, S Matthewman, DF Lorenz
Disasters 46 (1), 56-79, 2022
422022
The paradox of social capital: A case of immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities in the Canterbury and Tohoku disasters
S Uekusa
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 48, 101625, 2020
322020
Strategic invisibilization, hypervisibility and empowerment among marriage-migrant women in rural Japan
S Uekusa, S Lee
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46 (13), 2782-2799, 2020
312020
Methodological Challenges in Social Vulnerability and Resilience Research: Reflections on Studies in the Canterbury and Tohoku Disasters
S Uekusa
Social Science Quarterly 100 (4), 1404-1419, 2019
122019
Surfing with Bourdieu! A Qualitative Analysis of the Fluid Power Relations among Surfers in the Line-Ups
S Uekusa
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 48 (4), 538-562, 2019
122019
Social vulnerability in disasters: Immigrant and refugee experiences in Canterbury and Tohoku
S Uekusa
Recovery from catastrophic disaster in Asia. Community, Environment and …, 2017
112017
Social vulnerability, resilience and capital in disasters: Immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities in the 2010-2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disasters
S Uekusa
University of Auckland, 2018
92018
Exploring Disasters through the Eyes of Residential Nursing Home Caregivers
S Uekusa
Social Work in Public Health 34 (6), 529-541, 2019
72019
Longitudinal Cohort Study of Depression and Anxiety Among Older Informal Caregivers Following the Initial COVID-19 Pandemic Response in Aotearoa New Zealand
J Allen, S Uekusa, F Alpass
Journal of Aging and Health 34 (4-5), 653-665, 2022
62022
A Decade of Disaster Experiences in Ōtautahi Christchurch: Critical Disaster Studies Perspectives
S Uekusa, S Matthewman, B Glavovic
62022
Multidimensional, complex and contingent: Exploring international PhD students’ social mobility
R Roy, S Uekusa, J Karki
Ethnicities 21 (5), 827– 851, 2021
52021
Everyday Experiences and Linguicism: A Sociological Critique of linguistic human rights (LHRs)
S Uekusa
California State University San Marcos, 2009
5*2009
Preparing multilingual disaster communication for the crises of tomorrow: A conceptual discussion
S Uekusa, S Matthewman
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 87, 103589, 2023
42023
Disaster linguicism as deprivation of the victims' linguistic human rights
S Uekusa, S Matthewman
The Handbook of Linguistic Human Rights, 639-647, 2022
42022
Overcoming disaster linguicism: Using autoethnography during the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark to explore how community translators can provide multilingual disaster communication
S Uekusa
Journal of Applied Communication Research 50 (6), 673-690, 2022
42022
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