Hyperlocal Organizing: Collaborating for Recovery Over Time explores the difficult work of post-disaster recovery. The author, Jack Harris, demonstrates that after disaster, broad interorganizational landscapes are needed to unite the grassroots, neighborhoods, communities, and institutions to solve problems of recovery and bring people home. Yet all too often, government disaster policy and institutions ignore the critical role of local knowledge and organizing. Exploring the organizational landscape of the Mid-Atlantic United States after Hurricane Sandy, Harris reveals how participation and collaboration open multiple pathways to recovery after disaster by building resilience and democratizing governance. Using powerful theories of communicating and organizing, this book develops a new frameworkâ"hyperlocal organizingâ"to address the grand challenge of community survivability in the twenty-first century. Achieving community survivability requires robust organizational partnerships and interorganizational collaboration to solve collective problems. The lessons Harris presents are important not just for post-disaster recovery, but for addressing grand challenges such as climate change, environmental justice, and equitable community development. Scholars of environmental communication, disaster studies, and emergency management, will find this book of particular interest.
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After a disaster strikes, what happens once the rescue helicopters and cameras go away? In Hyperlocal Organizing, Harris offers an answer that is part cautionary tale and part template for academics and communities. Using research on the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy and drawing on examples from other disasters (e.g., September 11 and Hurricanes Katrina, Maria, and Harvey), Harris examines the overlooked details when "response morphs into recovery." In his analysis, the picture that emerges is how the Federal Emergency Management Administration, the Red Cross, and other established organizations come like bureaucratic hurricanes into affected communities. Generally, "top tier" organizations-though with some exceptions-have historically overlooked spontaneous volunteers, grassroots recovery efforts, and local organizations. The heart and soul of this book is the notion that recovery from crisis and disaster takes place at the grassroots, neighborhood, and community levels. As the United States and other countries continue to experience frequent, intense weather disasters, this book should serve as a guide on how to better integrate the top-tier responders more effectively with grassroots organizations, and also how to prepare communities for the most common scenarios they will face after the cameras leave: isolation and abandonment. Recommended. All readership levels.