#26 - An Introduction to Disaster Ethics (Dr. Lauren Traczykowski)
IDRiM Podcast1 Jul 2025

#26 - An Introduction to Disaster Ethics (Dr. Lauren Traczykowski)

Summary:

This podcast explored the emerging discipline of disaster ethics, examining how ethical principles apply in crisis situations such as natural hazards, pandemics, and political instability. The conversation highlighted the complexity of ethical decision-making during disasters, where normal frameworks must adapt to rapidly changing circumstances, limited resources, and high stakes.

One key theme was the importance of distinguishing between disasters and crises. While disasters are often triggered by specific events (like earthquakes or floods), crises—such as climate change or war—result from ongoing, layered conditions. However, both challenges how ethical decisions are made, especially when professional roles, resource constraints, and societal vulnerabilities are involved.

Disasters reveal a society’s ethical priorities. Using the formula “risk = hazard + vulnerability,” the discussion emphasised that disasters are shaped not just by natural events but by underlying social inequalities. The impact of a disaster depends on the community’s infrastructure, social support systems, and capacity to respond—raising questions about justice, fairness, and preparedness.

The discussion stressed the need for ethical coordination across all professions involved in disaster response—not only first responders or medical staff, but also teachers, utility workers, and civil servants. Each profession may follow different ethical frameworks (duty-based vs. consequence-based) and aligning them requires shared understanding rather than judgment.

Responsibility was explored at multiple levels. National governments are typically seen as the primary duty-bearers due to their sovereign authority, but when states are unwilling or unable to act, the international community may have a moral obligation to step in. This raises questions about humanitarian aid, disaster colonialism, and the ethics of intervention.

Ultimately, the podcast called for more structured, inclusive preparedness planning and recognised that justice and fairness should guide disaster ethics just as they do in stable times—while adapting to the realities on the ground.

Guest: Dr. Lauren Traczykowski [Aston University, United Kingdom]

Co-Hosts:

  • Dr. Mark Ashley Parry [Northumbria University,United Kingdom]
  • Dr. Haris Rahadianto [Lund University, Sweden]

Music: "Sunset" by Kai Engel, available at ⁠Free Music Archive⁠, licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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