- Disaster Management and Resilience
- Participatory Visual Research Methods
- Public Relations and Crisis Communication
- Geographies of human-animal interactions
- Climate Change Communication and Perception
- Disaster Response and Management
- Flood Risk Assessment and Management
- Climate change impacts on agriculture
- Geographic Information Systems Studies
- Risk Perception and Management
- Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration
Technische Universität Berlin
2023
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
2022
Freie Universität Berlin
2018-2021
Communicating meteorological uncertainty allows earlier provision of information on possible future events. The desired benefit is to enable the end-user start with preparatory protective actions at an time based end-user's own risk assessment and decision threshold. presented results interview study, conducted 27 members German civil protection authorities, show that developments in meteorology weather forecasting do not necessarily fit current practices emergency services. These are mostly...
Abstract This article presents the results of a series ethnographic observations at Berlin fire brigade control and dispatch center during routine severe weather situations. The weather-related challenges lie between anticipation events their potential consequences, ad hoc reactions to actual impacts weather. show that decisions actions related high impact are not necessarily motivated by warnings alone. Instead, they experience impacts, for example, an increased number missions or emergency...
In light of the increasing tendency to view extreme weather events as experiences climate change, we revisit how and are measured experienced, contributing an ongoing dialogue on atmospheric between phenomenology, media studies geography. We make use complicate concept sensing sense heterogeneous modes experiencing measuring weather. First, detail history phenomenology experience measurement. Providing evidence for our theoretical account, go through two ethnographic examples...
In light of the increasing tendency to view extreme weather events as experiences climate change, we revisit how and are measured experienced, contributing an ongoing dialogue on atmospheric between phenomenology, media studies, geography. We make use complicate concept sensing sense heterogeneous modes experiencing measuring weather. First, detail history phenomenology experience measurement. Providing evidence for our theoretical account, go through two ethnographic examples...