Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Social work in extremis – disaster capitalism, ‘social shocks’ and ‘popular social work’
- one ‘Popular social work’ in the Palestinian West Bank: dispatches from the front line
- two Samidoun: grassroots welfare and popular resistance in Beirut during the 33-Day War of 2006
- three Grassroots community organising in a post-disaster context: lessons for social work education from Ilias, Greece
- four Grassroots community social work with the ‘unwanted’: the case of Kinisi and the rights of refugees and migrants in Patras, Greece
- five In search of emancipatory social work practice in contemporary Colombia: working with the despalzados in Bogota
- six Addressing social conflicts in Sri Lanka: social development interventions by a people's organisation
- seven International organisations, social work and war: a ‘frog's perspective’ reflection on the bird's eye view
- eight Welfare under warfare: the Greek struggle for emancipatory social welfare (1940–44)
- nine Social welfare services to protect elderly victims of war in Cyprus
- ten Worker's eye view of neoliberalism and Hurricane Katrina
- eleven Social work, social development and practice legitimacy in Central Asia
- Conclusion: Social work in extremis – some general conclusions
- References
- Index
three - Grassroots community organising in a post-disaster context: lessons for social work education from Ilias, Greece
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Social work in extremis – disaster capitalism, ‘social shocks’ and ‘popular social work’
- one ‘Popular social work’ in the Palestinian West Bank: dispatches from the front line
- two Samidoun: grassroots welfare and popular resistance in Beirut during the 33-Day War of 2006
- three Grassroots community organising in a post-disaster context: lessons for social work education from Ilias, Greece
- four Grassroots community social work with the ‘unwanted’: the case of Kinisi and the rights of refugees and migrants in Patras, Greece
- five In search of emancipatory social work practice in contemporary Colombia: working with the despalzados in Bogota
- six Addressing social conflicts in Sri Lanka: social development interventions by a people's organisation
- seven International organisations, social work and war: a ‘frog's perspective’ reflection on the bird's eye view
- eight Welfare under warfare: the Greek struggle for emancipatory social welfare (1940–44)
- nine Social welfare services to protect elderly victims of war in Cyprus
- ten Worker's eye view of neoliberalism and Hurricane Katrina
- eleven Social work, social development and practice legitimacy in Central Asia
- Conclusion: Social work in extremis – some general conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
On the 24 August 2007, 67 people were killed and 5,392 people were affected by a forest fire in the province of Ilias, a predominantly rural and semi-rural area in the Peloponnesus region of Greece. The fire was considered the worst ‘natural disaster’ in Greece during the period 2001–10. The economic damage was calculated to be in the region of US$1,750,000,000 (International Disaster Database, 2010); the environmental degradation was enormous.
The governing party (New Democracy) argued that weather conditions had played an integral role in the spread of the fire. It tried to abdicate responsibility for its slow and insufficient response by suggesting that the fires were a ‘natural disaster’ and tried to strip away the political context of the disaster by relocating the blame from the structural to the ‘natural’ (see Wisner et al, 2004). The claim made by Mr Polidoras, the Minister of Public Order and the man in charge of the fire fighting efforts, that ‘General Wind is the one that is prohibiting the fire fighting efforts’ was indicative of that attempt. Such statements were replicated over and over again in various media accounts (for example, Newsroom DOL, 2007).
Numerous accounts, though, have suggested that other forces were at play. For example, development projects created an incentive for the removal of forested areas and created opportunities for exploitation by corrupt public officials (Karamichas, 2007; NTUA, 2008; Zirogiannis, 2009). The suspicion is that the slow response of the state machine was not accidental (Pendaraki, 2010). As a member of the citizen's action group put it:
The fires were not inevitable, as the New Democracy government kept claiming. The scale of the destruction wasn't inevitable and wouldn't have occurred if it hadn't been for the unprecedented deficiency, lack of coordination and operational planning of the government in responding to the fires. Instead of taking measures in order to solve the problem of fires, all the governments of recent decades moved in the opposite direction. In their actions (forest-killing laws, attempts to amend Article No 24 of the Constitution2) or their omissions (National Land Register, Forest Register) and their tolerance they have left arsonists, intruders, and land-hungry persons undisturbed.
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- Social Work in ExtremisLessons for Social Work Internationally, pp. 51 - 64Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2011