Hello there, as part of an effort to circulate my research with people, I have listed all my work here. If you would like a copy of something send me an email.
My Google Scholar page will outline citations of my work (here). I also encourage any researcher to join ‘ResearchGate’, as I put all of my publications there as soon as I can, and it is all freely accessible once you sign up; my email signature will also direct people to copies.
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Engaging senior citizens and flood risk reduction: innovations in community engagement and the resulting spillover effects (Cook et al. in press)
Siagian, C., Utomo, A., Kamil, M. I., & Cook, B. (2023) UNRAVELLED HOMES: Forced Evictions and Home Remaking in Jakarta. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. (link)
Kamstra, P., Cook, B. R., Lawes, J. C., & Calverley, H. (2023). Engaging beachgoers for drowning prevention: the spillover effects on non-participants. Environmental hazards, 1-19.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B. R., Brander, R. W., Lawes, J. C., Matthews, B., Calverley, H., Imperiale, A., & Hooper, B. (2022). Awareness without learning: A preliminary study exploring the effects of beachgoer’s experiences on risk taking behaviours. Heliyon, 8(12), e12186.
Cook, B. R., Cornes, I., Satizabal, P., & de Lourdes Melo Zurita, M. (2022). Experiential learning, practices, and space for change: The institutional preconfiguration of community participation in flood risk reduction. Journal of Flood Risk Management, e12861. (Open Access Here)
Tran, T. A., Tran, H. V., Pittock, J., & Cook, B. (2022). Political ecology of freshening the Mekong’s coastal delta: narratives of place-based land-use dynamics. Journal of Land Use Science, 17(1), 471-486. (Open Access Here)
Satizabal, P., Cornes, I., Zurita, M. D. L. M., & Cook, B. R. (2022). The power of connection: Navigating the constraints of community engagement for disaster risk reduction. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 68, 102699.
Cook, B., Satizábal, P., & Curnow, J. (2021). Humanising agricultural extension: a review. World development, 1-30.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B., Edensor, T., Kennedy, D., & Kearnes, M. (2021). Relational risk and collective management: a pathway to transformational risk management. Risk Analysis, 1-20.
Cook, B. R., Kamstra, P., Savige, T., Cornes, I. C., Bannan, L., Alexandra, A., & Tjandra, E. (2020). The impact of peer-review on undergraduate grades when students decide whether to participate. Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1-15.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B., Kennedy, D., Rijksen, E., & Daw, S. (2020). Drowning ‘Truths’: Contrasting experiential-experts’ perceptions with official-experts drowning reports on Australia’s hazardous coasts. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 101558.
Cook, B., & Melo Zurita, M. d. L. (2019). Fulfilling the promise of participation by not resuscitating the deficit model Global environmental change.
Dovey, K., Cook, B., & Achmadi, A. (2019). Contested riverscapes in Jakarta: flooding, forced eviction and urban image. Space and Polity, 23(3), 265-282.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B. R., Brennan-Horley, C., & Kennedy, D. M. (2019). Qualitative GIS to relate perceptions with behaviors among fishers on risky, rocky coasts. The Professional Geographer.
Cook, B.R., & Overpeck, J. (2019). Relationship-building between climate scientists and publics as an alternative to information transfer. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change. (Open Access Here)
Cornes, I. C., Cook, B. R., Satizábal, P., & Melo Zurita, M. d. L. (2019). What is ‘(In)action’? Rethinking Traditional Understandings of Disaster Risk Reduction in Households. Australian Journal of Emergency Management.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B., Kennedy, D., McSweeney, S., Rijksen, E., & Daw, S. (2019). Expert perceptions of the ‘freak’ wave myth on Australia’s rocky coasts. Ocean and Coastal Management.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B.R., Edensor, T., & Kennedy, D. M. (2019). Re‐casting experience and risk along rocky coasts: A relational analysis using qualitative GIS. The Geographical Journal.
Cornes, I. C., & Cook, B.R. (2018). Localising climate change: heatwave responses in urban households. Disaster Prevention and Management.
Kamstra, P., Cook, B.R., Kennedy, D. M., & Brighton, B. (2018). Treating risk as relational on shore platforms and implications for public safety on microtidal rocky coasts. Natural hazards, 91(3), 1299-1316.
de Lourdes Melo Zurita, Cook, B.R., Thomsen, D., Munro, P., Smith, P., and Gallina, J. (2018). Living with Disasters: Emerging Governance Frameworks in Queensland. Disasters. 1 – 14.
Cook, B.R. and Babon, A. (2017). Active Learning through online quizzes: better learning and less (busy) work. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 41(1): 24-38.
Cook, B. R. & Zurita, M. D. L. M. (2016), “Planning to learn: an insurgency for disaster risk reduction (DRR).” International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 19: 265-272.
Cook, B.R. Forrester, J., Bracken, L., Spray, C., Oughton, L. (2016) Competing Paradigms of Flood Management in the Scottish/English Borderlands. Journal of Disaster Prevention and Management 25(3): 314-328.
Bracken, L., Oughton, E., Donaldson, A., Cook, B. R., Forrester, J., Spray, C., Cinderby, S., Passmore, D. and Bissett, N. (2016). Flood risk management; an approach to managing cross-border hazards. Natural Hazards 82(2): 217-240
Balayannis, A. & Cook, B. R. (2016), “Suicide at a distance: The paradox of knowing self-destruction.” Progress in Human Geography 40(4): 530-545.
Cook, B. R., Rickards, L. and Rutherfurd, I. (2015). Geographies of the Anthropocene. Geographical Research 53(3): 231-243
Cook, B. R. (2015). Disaster management culture in Bangladesh: the enrolment of local knowledge by decision makers. Cultures & Disasters: understanding cultural framings in disaster risk reduction. F. Krüger, G. Bankoff, T. Cannon, B. E. Orlowski and L. F. Schipper, Routledge.
Cook, B. R. and Balayannis, A. (2015). Co-producing (a fearful) Anthropocene. Geographical Research 53(3): 270-279.
de Lourdes Melo Zurita, M., Cook, B. R., Harms, L. and March, A. (2015). Towards New Disaster Governance: subsidiarity as a critical tool. Environmental Policy and Governance 25(6): 386-398.
Forrester, J., Cook, B. R., Bracken, L., Cinderby, S. and Donaldson, A. (2015). Combining participatory mapping with Q-methodology to map stakeholder perceptions of complex environmental problems. Applied Geography 56: 199-208.
Cook, B. R., Kesby, M., Fazey, I., and Spray, C. (2013). The persistence of ‘normal’ catchment management despite the participatory turn: Exploring the power effects of competing frames of reference. Social Studies of Science 43(5): 754-779.
Cook, B. R., Atkinson, M., Chalmers, H., Comins, L., Cooksley, S., Deans, N., Fazey, I., Fenemor, A., Kesby, M. and Litke, S. (2013). Interrogating participatory catchment organisations: cases from Canada, New Zealand, Scotland and the Scottish–English Borderlands. The Geographical Journal 179(3): 234–247.
Cook, B. R. and Spray, C. J. 2012. Ecosystem services and integrated water resource management: Different paths to the same end? Journal of Environmental Management 109(0): 93-100.
Davies, S. R., Cook, B. R. and Oven, K. 2012. ‘Risk’ in field research. in Critical risk research: practices, politics and ethics. M. B. Kearnes, F. Klauser and S. N. Lane (eds.). Singapore, John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Cook, B. R. and Wisner, B. 2010. Water, risk and vulnerability in Bangladesh: Twenty years since the FAP. Environmental Hazards 9(1): 3-7.
Cook, B. R. and Lane, S. N. 2010. Communities of knowledge: science and flood management in Bangladesh. Environmental Hazards 9(1): 8-25. Here.
Cook, B. R. 2010. Flood Knowledge and Management in Bangladesh: increasing diversity, complexity and uncertainty. Geography Compass 4(7): 750–767. Here.
Cook, B. R. 2008. Challenging Assumptions Controversy in Bangladesh: What sort of knowledge for what sort of flood management? Geography: the journal of the Geographical Association 93(2): 114-118.
