University of Canterbury's John Hopkins and Toni Collins explain disaster law and shortcomings in NZ's legal system highlighted by the Canterbury earthquakes.
The Canterbury earthquakes in 2010 and 2011, and subsequent large shakes, have drawn attention to short-comings in the way our legal system deals with disaster.
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Toni Collins and John Hopkins are used to raised eyebrows when they attend meetings with their QuakeCore colleagues.
The pair are lawyers at the University of Canterbury, whilst their colleagues are scientists and engineers.
But all of them are interested in creating a society that is more resilient when it comes to dealing with disasters, and Toni and John say that a strong well-designed legal system is an important aspect of that.
"A legal system is really just the way society organises itself," says John.
John says that disasters are commonly misunderstood.
"When people think about a disaster they think about an earthquake or a volcano, a tsunami or even a health event. But that's not the disaster - the disaster is a social event.
"The volcano that erupts when no one is there is not a disaster," says John.
"Disasters are an interaction between the hazard and what vulnerabilities you have in your society."
In Christchurch in 2011, he says, the vulnerabilities were a city built on a swamp and the way buildings were constructed.
Disaster law
Disaster law is a relatively new field which Toni says began to develop over a decade ago.
She says lawyers involved in this field are keen to ensure societies are well-prepared for possible future disasters.
Internationally, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies' Disaster Law Programme, which "seeks to reduce human vulnerability by promoting legal preparedness for disasters through advocacy, technical assistance, training and research", drew up International Disaster Law Guidelines which have been adopted by all signatories to the Geneva Convention.
"The law should be prepared"
One of Toni's research projects involved the situation following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake where tenants of useable buildings in the central city Red Zone found themselves still liable to pay rent on premises they could no longer access, often in addition to paying rent on new premises.
"Their leases did not cover what should happen if their buildings were inaccessible," says Toni. "And the Property Law Act didn't provide for it either."…