- psychosocial recovery (x)
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- dc.title
- Community resilience
- dc.description
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Ch.3: Understanding Social Recovery report
This chapter discusses CERA's Community Resilience Programme which led and coordinated the psychosocial system of services and supports across a number of partner agencies. The programme enabled communities to continue to lead their own recovery and promoted effective community engagement. This chapter outlines these activities. The key lessons discussed will help you strategize and implement similar activities in your recovery context.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Communication and Community Engagement, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Resilience, Psychosocial Recovery, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Social and cultural outcomes
- dc.description
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Ch.2: Understanding Social Recovery report
This chapter discusses the social recovery monitoring work undertaken by CERA, including the Canterbury Wellbeing Index which it developed to monitor social recovery indicators across 28 agencies. It also describes the development of new survey methods such as the CERA Wellbeing Survey and the Youth Wellbeing Survey to collect self-reported wellbeing data from residents over time.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Psychosocial Recovery, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- The social recovery portfolio
- dc.description
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Ch.1: Understanding Social Recovery report
This chapter discusses social recovery leadership from within a central government agency based in the disaster affected region. It gives an overview of the psychosocial recovery framework, key leadership skills, and core values. This chapter will help you understand recovery leadership as a challenge and opportunity, and consider the skills and value necessary to lead your recovery.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Leadership and Governance, Community Engagement, Psychosocial Recovery, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Community in Mind Strategy
- dc.description
- The Community in Mind Strategy for rebuilding health and wellbeing in greater Christchurch.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Leadership and Governance, Communication and Community Engagement, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Recovery Strategy for Greater Christchurch, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Secondary stressors and extreme events and disasters: A systematic review of primary research from 2010-2011
- dc.description
- Extreme events and disasters cause distress and are associated with some people developing mental disorders. This literature recognises the distress which primary stressors cause and their association with mental disorders. Secondary stressors such as a lack of financial assistance, the gruelling process of submitting an insurance claim, and continued lack of infrastructure can manifest their effects shortly after a disaster and persist for extended periods of time.
- Creator(s)
- Sarah Lock, G James Rubin, Virginia Murray, M Brooke Rogers, Richard AmlĂ´t, Richard Williams
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Call for Ideas to Remember
- dc.description
- In July 2014, CERA led a community engagement process to inform the design of the Canterbury Earthquake Memorial. The Memorial would be a place where people could honour the lives of those who died and acknowledge the shared trauma experienced by the people of Canterbury.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Built Environment, Social Recovery Environment, Communication and Community Engagement, Christchurch Central City, Collaboration and Partnership, Communicating in Recovery, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Recovery Strategy for Greater Christchurch, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Waimakariri Earthquake Social Recovery Services
- dc.description
- The paper provides a brief account of the history of Kaiapoi and the impact of the 4 September and subsequent earthquakes on the town's infrastructure. It also outlines the plans prepared by the Waimakariri District Council in 2010 to undertake a comprehensive rebuild of the most seriously damaged parts of the town.
- Creator(s)
- Waimakariri District Council
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Community Engagement, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Christchurch Innovations: Earthquake Support Coordination Service
- dc.description
- An integrated service response by multiple support agencies has helped many people in the Christchurch community to find shelter and get back on their feet following the Canterbury earthquakes.
- Creator(s)
- State Services Commission
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Communication and Community Engagement, Conditions for Innovation, Collaboration and Partnership, Psychosocial Recovery, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Briefing paper: The psychosocial consequences of the Canterbury earthquakes
- dc.description
- This briefing was given by Professor Sir Peter Gluckman, Chief Science Advisor to the Prime Minister, at a press conference in Christchurch on 10 May 2011. It outlines psychosocial issues following a disaster and identifies psychosocial support available to affected people in Canterbury.
- Creator(s)
- Office of the Prime Minister's Science Advisory Committee
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Psychosocial Recovery
- dc.title
- Evaluation of the Canterbury Earthquake Appeal & Recovery Programme
- dc.description
- This document reports the results of an evaluation of the New Zealand Red Cross' (NZRC) Canterbury Earthquake Appeal Recovery Programme (CEARP). It contains a number of lessons for NZRC about how it should conduct recovery programming in the future. The evaluation approach was designed to combine both qualitative and quantitative research, and garner insights from a number of stakeholder groups.
- Creator(s)
- New Zealand Red Cross
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Resource Allocation, Community Resilience, Psychosocial Recovery
- dc.title
- Learning from the Ministry of Social Development's contribution to the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Efforts
- dc.description
- This paper contributes focuses on the role of the Ministry of Social Development (MSD) in the 2010-11 Canterbury earthquake recovery efforts. MSD welcomes the opportunity to reflect on the scope and evolution of recovery needs, effective strategies to meet those needs, and how lessons learned from those efforts can inform MSD's role (as foreseen in New Zealand's 2015 National Civil Defence Emergency Management Plan) and whole of government.
- Creator(s)
- Ministry of Social Development
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Leadership and Governance, Conditions for Innovation, Collaboration and Partnership, Psychosocial Recovery, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Monitoring wellbeing during recovery from the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquakes: The CERA wellbeing survey
- dc.description
- This paper outlines the process and outcomes of a multi-agency, multi-sector research collaboration, led by the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA).
- Creator(s)
- Jane Morgan, Annabel Begg, Sarah Beaven, Philip Schluter, Kath Jamieson, Sarbjit Johal, David Johnston, Mary Sparrow
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Resilience, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- CERA Wellbeing Survey September 2015
- dc.description
- The CERA Wellbeing Survey supplemented the data collected by a range of agencies for the Canterbury Wellbeing Index. It gathered self-reported wellbeing data about quality of life, levels of stress, stressors, positive outcomes and Canterbury residents' perceptions of the recovery. With a unique sample of 2,500 residents each wave, the data could be broken down to demographic and geographic sub-populations, enabling analysis of recovery progress at more detailed levels. Six-monthly reports were made publically available from September 2012 to September 2015.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- CERA Wellbeing Survey September 2014
- dc.description
- The CERA Wellbeing Survey supplemented the data collected by a range of agencies for the Canterbury Wellbeing Index. It gathered self-reported wellbeing data about quality of life, levels of stress, stressors, positive outcomes and Canterbury residents' perceptions of the recovery. With a unique sample of 2,500 residents each wave, the data could be broken down to demographic and geographic sub-populations, enabling analysis of recovery progress at more detailed levels. Six-monthly reports were made publically available from September 2012 to September 2015.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Community engagement strategy and framework
- dc.description
- Early on, CERA developed a Community Engagement Strategy and a Community Engagement Framework to guide its work. These documents committed CERA to working transparently and inclusively. The goal was to enable communities and individuals to participate in decision making on rebuilding and revitalising greater Christchurch.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Communication and Community Engagement, Collaboration and Partnership, Communicating in Recovery, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Recovery Strategy for Greater Christchurch, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Canterbury Wellbeing Index 2015
- dc.description
- The Canterbury Wellbeing was a collaborative project across many government agencies which tracked the progress of social recovery following the 2010/ 2011 earthquakes. It used indicators to identify emerging social trends and issues, providing communities and decisions makers with up to date, accurate and comprehensive information.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Canterbury Wellbeing Index 2014
- dc.description
- The Canterbury Wellbeing was a collaborative project across many government agencies which tracked the progress of social recovery following the 2010/ 2011 earthquakes. It used indicators to identify emerging social trends and issues, providing communities and decisions makers with up to date, accurate and comprehensive information.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- Canterbury Wellbeing Index December 2013
- dc.description
- The Canterbury Wellbeing was a collaborative project across many government agencies which tracked the progress of social recovery following the 2010/ 2011 earthquakes. It used indicators to identify emerging social trends and issues, providing communities and decisions makers with up to date, accurate and comprehensive information.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- CERA Wellbeing Survey April 2015
- dc.description
- The CERA Wellbeing Survey supplemented the data collected by a range of agencies for the Canterbury Wellbeing Index. It gathered self-reported wellbeing data about quality of life, levels of stress, stressors, positive outcomes and Canterbury residents' perceptions of the recovery. With a unique sample of 2,500 residents each wave, the data could be broken down to demographic and geographic sub-populations, enabling analysis of recovery progress at more detailed levels. Six-monthly reports were made publically available from September 2012 to September 2015.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery
- dc.title
- CERA Wellbeing Survey April 2013
- dc.description
- The CERA Wellbeing Survey supplemented the data collected by a range of agencies for the Canterbury Wellbeing Index. It gathered self-reported wellbeing data about quality of life, levels of stress, stressors, positive outcomes and Canterbury residents' perceptions of the recovery. With a unique sample of 2,500 residents each wave, the data could be broken down to demographic and geographic sub-populations, enabling analysis of recovery progress at more detailed levels. Six-monthly reports were made publically available from September 2012 to September 2015.
- Creator(s)
- CERA (Canterbury Earthquakes Recovery Authority)
- Tags
- Social Recovery Environment, Understanding the Recovery Context, Resource Allocation, Collaboration and Partnership, Community Engagement, Community Resilience, Housing Recovery, Psychosocial Recovery, Recovery Policy, Residential Red Zone, Social Recovery