Gonzalo Lizarralde is a professor of architecture at the Université de Montréal, where he holds the Fayolle-Magil Construction Chair in Architecture, Built Environment, and Sustainability. He is the director of the Canadian Disaster Resilience and Sustainable Reconstruction Research Alliance. His books include The Invisible Houses: Rethinking and Designing Low-Cost Housing in Developing Countries (2014).
In this book, Gonzalo Lizarralde tackles some of the most pressing and difficult questions the world faces today as we struggle to adapt to climate change and intensified disasters. The result is a valuable and unique compendium of wisdom and experience, full of insight into both environmental problems and human nature. -- David Alexander, professor of risk and disaster reduction, University College London Lizarralde provides an erudite and searing critique of the development paradigm and its buzzwords, and ultimately challenges the reader to find hope in the courage and leadership of the oppressed. The highly accessible stories contained in this book radically humanize and uplift people experiencing the long-term process of a disaster. Unnatural Disasters is a call to repoliticize our narratives and consider our participation in this site of contested power. -- Jason von Meding, M. E. Rinker Sr. School of Construction Management, Florida Institute for Built Environment Resilience, University of Florida This book explains the contentious and complex topic of why disasters are not natural in an accessible and passionate way. It also challenges our current thinking by highlighting the gaps that we need to bridge in order to limit risk creation. Lizarralde’s account of ordinary people’s experiences is wonderful and will help readers connect with the issue. -- Ksenia Chmutina, coauthor of <i>Disaster Risk Reduction for the Built Environment</i> This book draws on Lizarralde’s long experience as a scholar and practitioner to examine, in an engaging prose and with a sharp eye, the roots, complexities, and consequences of what he lucidly calls “unnatural disasters” and responses to them. By taking an intellectual scalpel to commonly held assumptions and conventional solutions, backed by rigorously researched case studies in a social justice framework, Unnatural Disasters makes an important contribution to development scholarship, policy formulation, and practice. -- Julio D. Dávila, professor of urban policy and international development, University College London Lizarralde provides a powerful critique of naïve expectations and superficial narratives regarding sustainable postdisaster reconstruction. * H-Environment *