By Manish Patel, AIDMI, India
Disasters do not respect borders—geographical, institutional, or disciplinary. Floods, heatwaves, cyclones, earthquakes, pandemics, and displacement spill across boundaries, exposing communities that are already living close to vulnerability. What protects recovery in such a world is not only resources or infrastructure, but learning—learning that is continuous, collective, and grounded in lived realities.
For twenty years, Southasiadisasters.net has been that learning bridge. Since its first issue in 2005, the publication has documented more than 2,400 articles, authored by 1,889 contributors across 67 countries, covering themes from tsunami recovery to extreme heat, microinsurance, early warning, urban resilience, school safety, and climate adaptation. It is one of the most sustained knowledge archives in the Global South, connecting practitioners, policymakers, researchers, and affected communities across boundaries.
Its records show that recovery strengthens when three things happen:
Recovery is Protected When Learning is Shared
Disasters without boundaries require knowledge without boundaries. Southasiadisasters.net has shown that recovery is not a one-time phase after impact—it is a continuous practice strengthened by:
As South Asia enters an era of extreme heat, climate extremes, and rapid urbanisation, the lessons preserved across Issues 1 to 224 form a living library for future recovery. They protect recovery by ensuring that no community has to face the next disaster alone, uninformed, or unheard.
| “Disasters cross boundaries, but so does learning. Southasiadisasters.net was built on the belief that when communities share what they know, recovery becomes stronger, faster, and just for all.” – Mihir R. Bhatt, AIDMI. |