Your search within this document for 'Rescue' resulted in two matching pages.
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“...have not yet been recovered from the Langtang avalanche zone. 6. For example, Tamang communities make up only 5.8% of Nepal’s population yet an estimated 34% of total earthquake casualties were Tamang (Magar 2015). See also Thapa (2015). 7. At this point in the ‘Emergency Phase,’ most large NGOs were still establishing logistical supply chains (with the exception of a few with air assets) and mobilizations by the Nepalese state (with the exception of the Nepal Army, which focused on search and rescue and evacuation operations) remained limited. 8. Our term post-disaster taskscapes refers both to the work of Appadurai (1990) and Ingold (1993), in the wake of disaster, the landscape is re-animated by a variety of tasks—this includes both a localized meshwork of entangled tasks that seek to recover the temporality and resonance of place (Ingold 1993) and pre-fabricated tasks that circulated within a globally circulating humanitarian ‘scape’ populated by highly mobile disaster practitioners ...”
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“...Coverage. The Conversation, May 4, 2015. (accessed on November 30, 2016). Oliver-Smith, Anthony. 1986. The Martyred City: Death and Rebirth in the Andes. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. Oliver-Smith, Anthony and Susana M. Hoffman, Eds. 1999. The Angry Earth: Disaster in Anthropological Perspective. London: Routledge. Raj, Yogesh and Bhaskar Gautam. 2015. Courage in Chaos: Early Rescue and Relief after the April Earthquake. Kathmandu: Martin Chautari. HIMALAYA Volume37,Number2 101...”