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10 Dec, 2025
Celebrating 225 Issues of Southasiadisasters.net: Two Decades of Voices, Vision, and Value

By AIDMI Team

 

2022 SOHS Reflections for Utilisation: Dean of Social Science, Provost Open University, Director AIDMI, Minister for Disaster Management, Professor of UCL, and VC of Dhaka University share the SOHS utilisation report at the GRRIPP Conference, Dhaka. AIDMI shares the SOHS utilisation report with the Bangladesh Minister for Disaster Mitigation on September 18, 2023, encouraging the leveraging of local finance for gender, intersectionality, and extreme heat and floods resilience at the GRRIPP Conference by Dhaka University.

 

For twenty years, Southasiadisasters.net has connected local experiences with global frameworks, capturing the pulse of resilience across South Asia and beyond. From its first issue in 2005 to the landmark 225th issue in 2025, the publication has served as a bridge among practitioners, researchers, policymakers, and affected communities. With over 2,400 articles authored by 1,889 contributors from 67 countries, this living archive stands as a testament to the power of shared learning, solidarity, and community action.

Who Reads Southasiadisasters.net

The readership of Southasiadisasters.net mirrors the diversity of the resilience community itself. Practitioners make up the majority (about 55%) and bring field-level perspectives from across Asia and Africa. Researchers and academicians represent another 20%, followed by policymakers and government officials (15%), and community leaders, students, and volunteers (10%). This unique blend ensures that every issue speaks to both the doers and the decision-makers.

The Contributors Behind the Knowledge

Over two decades, Southasiadisasters.net has published 2,413 articles, authored by 1,889 identified contributors and 524 anonymous writers. The network spans 67 countries, led by India (1,237 authors), followed by the UK, Bangladesh, Switzerland, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Thailand, and Pakistan. Practitioners from civil society make up the largest group (58%), complemented by academics, researchers, journalists, and policymakers. Together, they form a truly global community of practice committed to disaster and climate resilience.

Thematic Diversity Across 224 Issues

The 224 issues published before this milestone have explored a remarkable range of topics. The most frequent themes include Disaster Recovery (22 issues), Natural Hazards (19), Disaster Risk Reduction (18), COVID-19 Pandemic (16), and Climate Change and Disasters (15). Others have focused on Catastrophic Disasters, School Safety, Urban Resilience, Humanitarian Action, Governance, Microinsurance, Early Warning, and Community-Based Disaster Risk Management. Each theme reflects the evolving landscape of risks and the search for solutions.

Localisation in Action

From its inception, Southasiadisasters.net has been grounded in local realities. It has consistently been published in and about multiple South Asian languages, amplifying community perspectives often lost in academic or policy texts. As JC Gaillard notes, its strength lies in valuing all forms of knowledge—local, indigenous, and experiential—without forcing translation or hierarchy. This makes it one of the few genuinely decolonised platforms in the disaster studies and practice ecosystem.

Building Resilience, Issue by Issue

Resilience has been the central thread running through every issue. Over two decades, the publication has showcased local recovery, adaptation, governance, and innovation. It has an advanced understanding of microinsurance, anticipatory action, and climate finance while emphasising community participation. The 225 issues together form one of the largest archives of resilience learning in the Global South, reflecting a sustained commitment to continuity and local leadership.

Making Extreme Heat Visible

Among the most recent and significant themes is extreme heat. Since 2022, Southasiadisasters.net has become a leading voice documenting this emerging humanitarian challenge. Issues on “Heat as a Humanitarian Crisis” and “Nature-Based Cooling Solutions for Cities” have highlighted the risks faced by small businesses, women workers, and informal livelihoods. AIDMI’s pioneering work with SEWA and local partners has turned this focus into a model for community-based adaptation and anticipatory action.

Centring Affected Populations

The publication has never lost sight of its purpose—to amplify the voices of those most affected. Across 2,400 articles, women, children, the elderly, persons with disabilities, farmers, and informal workers have all found representation. The stories of these communities, told in their own words and contexts, have shaped a more inclusive understanding of risk and resilience.

Gender and Resilience

Gender equality has been both a theme and a principle. From special issues on “Women’s Leadership in DRR” to case studies of women-led resilience initiatives in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and India, Southasiadisasters.net has consistently underscored the central role of women in disaster risk reduction, climate adaptation, and humanitarian response. Its gender lens is not symbolic—it is structural, woven into the journal’s DNA.

A Timeline of Twenty Years

The journey of Southasiadisasters.net is marked by key milestones:

  • 2005: Launch following the Indian Ocean Tsunami.
  • 2008: 50th Issue – a self-reflective edition on knowledge sharing.
  • 2015: Alignment with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.
  • 2020: Series on the COVID-19 pandemic and community response.
  • 2022–2025: Focus on extreme heat, anticipatory finance, and community-based adaptation.
  • 2025: Celebration of the 225th issue—twenty years of uninterrupted publication.

 

Guiding Voices and Advisors

The Southasiadisasters.net’s journey has been guided by a distinguished advisory board. Current advisors include Anoja Seneviratne (Sri Lanka DMC), Denis Nkala (UNDP USA), G. Padmanabhan (UNDP India Retd.), Dr Ian Davis (UK), Dr P.G. Dhar Chakrabarti (India), and Dr Satchit Balsari (Harvard FXB Center). Past advisors and contributors have included renowned figures such as Ben Wisner, Zenaida Delica-Willison, JC Gaillard, John Twigg, Madhavi Malalgoda Ariyabandu, Kala Peiris De Costa, Khurshid Alam, Rita Schneider–Sliwa, O.P. Mishra, T. Nanda Kumar, and Anshuman Saikia.

Readers’ Recommendations for the Future

  1. Readers have shared their aspirations for the next phase of the publication:
  2. Address politically sensitive risk issues with courage and balance.
  3. Adopt more interactive formats—visual stories, podcasts, and short films.
  4. Engage students and young professionals as writers and editors.
  5. Deepen focus on migration, green jobs, and digital risk governance.

Preserve linguistic and cultural diversity by promoting contributions in local languages.

What Practitioners Value Most

Practitioners across South Asia recognise Southasiadisasters.net for its practicality:

  1. Actionable insights in concise formats (average 800 words).
  2. Peer learning from 67 countries.
  3. Bridges between fieldwork and policy dialogue.
  4. Open-access archive for knowledge exchange.
  5. A collaborative platform for South–South learning.

Policy Impact and Value

For policymakers, the publication serves as a field-tested source of evidence:

  1. Grounded examples for DRR and climate policy formulation.
  2. Regional comparisons that inform national planning.
  3. Integration of Sendai, Paris, and SDG principles.
  4. Accessible language and practical takeaways.
  5. Documentation of scalable, locally-led policy innovations.

A Donor’s Agenda for the Future

For donors and development partners, Southasiadisasters.net offers clear direction:

  1. Invest in community-led knowledge and documentation systems.
  2. Support anticipatory and climate resilience financing.
  3. Enable South–South knowledge exchange and learning platforms.
  4. Fund local-language and digital accessibility initiatives.
  5. Scale up pilot-to-policy learning and community innovation.

Conclusion

The 225th issue of Southasiadisasters.net is not merely a celebration of numbers—it is a celebration of commitment, collaboration, and continuity. It reflects AIDMI’s belief that resilience begins with knowledge and that knowledge must be shared widely, across languages, boundaries, and disciplines. As it looks toward its next hundred issues, the publication continues to stand for the principles on which it was founded: grounded learning, inclusive voices, and the collective pursuit of safer, more resilient communities across South Asia and the world.

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