Animal ABidings: recoverIng from DisastErs in more-than-human communities

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101043231
EC Contribution
€20,000
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2023
Summary

What and how can we learn from animals about recovering from disasters? How can we hear them in their own terms, translate their stories, and include their perspectives, in human knowledge about disasters? This project explores the resilience of multispecies communities, and their capacities for healing and bouncing back from disasters, through the point of view of nonhuman animals. It departs from the current context of acute climate crisis, which sets the stage for Dantesque scenarios of impending climate-driven disasters such as wildfires, floods, tornados and hurricanes, with related extensive loss of both human and nonhuman lives, liveable dwellings and species extinction. Focusing on wildfires as disasters that challenge previous expert knowledge due to climate change and human exploitation of natural resources, we propose to compare three countries where wildfires have taken on increasingly critical proportions every year: Brazil, Australia and Portugal. We address a species gap in our knowledge of disasters, and wildfires in particular, by exploring the possibilities of learning with animals how to live and cope with extreme change and uncertainty in wildfire-prone areas. Drawing on contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, ethologists, biologists and geographers, ABIDE aims at attuning to, translating and including the voices, stories and experiences of animals into our knowledge of how multispecies communities can better recover from the traumatic experience of wildfires. In the end, we seek to build the foundations for a new interdisciplinary framework for addressing humans' and animals' ability to build and abide in multispecies communities that are more resilient to wildfires and other disasters. In so doing, we aspire to identify the landmarks of a post-species episteme, and thus push forward the frontiers of knowledge of human-animal relations, as well as contribute to a more-than-human governance of disasters.

Consortium (1)

Project Results (7)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (6)
Adapting whilst recovering: Local responses to the 2017 wildfires in Portugal
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction· 2025DOI
Filipa Soares, Luísa Schmidt, Ana Delicado
Organizing Ecologies of (Human) Abandonment on Portuguese Wildfires
The Palgrave Handbook of Human-Animal Interactions in the Global Context of Climate Change, Disasters, and Other Crises· 2025DOI
Leticia Fantinel, Verónica Policarpo
Portraying Animals in Disasters: News Media Representations of the Portuguese Wildfires of 2017
Environmental Communication· 2025DOI
Verónica Policarpo, Filipa Soares, Xinyue Zhang, Leonor Pereira da Costa
Predictors of small mammal diversity in human-modified landscapes in West Africa
Ecological Indicators· 2025DOI
Raquel N. de Oliveira, Djunco Dabo, Patrícia Guedes, Filipa M.S. Martins, Sambu Seck, Ana Rainho, Ana Filipa Palmeirim
Time for rewilding: The chronobiopolitics of wildlife conservation in Britain
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space· 2025DOI
Filipa Soares; Jamie Lorimer
Risco de incêndio florestal: características, perceções e medidas necessárias. Pessoas e Fogo. Policy Brief
· 2023
Soares, F., Schmidt, L., Delicado, A., Bergonse, R., Zêzere, J. L., Oliveira, S., Policarpo, V.
Deliverables (1)
Documents, reports