Skip to content
Mutual Aid Disaster Relief Logo Mutual Aid Disaster Relief Logo
  • About
    • About MADR
    • Mission and Vision
    • Core Values
    • Guiding Principles
    • Survival Programs
    • FAQ
  • Updates
  • Co-conspirators
  • Resources
    • COVID-19
    • Mutual Aid
    • Anti-oppression
    • Apps and Tech
    • Disaster Response
    • Emergency Hotlines
    • Health and Wellness
    • Infrastructure
    • Legal and Security
    • Popular Education and Direct Action
    • DIY Cleanup
  • Media
    • In The News
    • Audio, Films, and Video
    • Research Articles
    • Books
    • Artwork
    • Zines
  • Contact
  • Join
  • Donate

Disaster Response

Home/Disaster Response
Disaster Response2022-05-20T13:26:24-04:00
  • Resilience Force and The New Florida Majority

    A People's Framework for Disaster Response: Rewriting the Rules of Recovery after Climate Disasters

    When the levees broke in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the images of destruction and desperation launched a national conversation about disasters, inequality and climate change. Much of the conversation has focused on how to better prepare communities for future disasters

  • West Street Recovery

    A Window Propped Open: Timelines

    In crisis, a window of opportunity is thrown open. Despite everything else going wrong, despite grief and loss,
    despite the hands that are paid to enforce law and order being beyond reach, and despite lacking survival basics, we happen upon a chance to prove to ourselves and each other that we’re human.

  • West Street Recovery

    A Window Propped Open II: Lessons Learned Organizing After Hurricane Harvey

    The recovery work in Houston is far from over, but in the last six months, we've learned a heck of a lot.

  • West Street Recovery

    A Window Propped Open III: Reflections on Two Years of Harvey Recovery Work

    There’s a sign still hanging on the front door of the house on West Street where West Street Recovery (WSR) launched a week of boat rescues from as Hurricane Harvey passed over Houston.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    A Love Letter to the Future: On mutual aid & building power while the lights are out

    The storms are coming. The water is rising in some places and running empty in others. The refugee situation now is just a glimpse at what it very well may become once we see the results of the seeds we have sown of wetlands loss, climate change, urbanization, and fossil fuel extraction.

  • Canada Emergency Measures Organization

    Basic Rescue Skills

    The object of this booklet is to teach the fundamental skills of rescue work.

  • Transition US

    Be Prepared: Build Inner Resilience & Resilience Hubs

    A Guide to Resilience for the New ‘20s

  • Physician's for Social Responsibility

    Citizen’s Guide for Readiness for Climate Extremes in the Desert Southwest

    Building resilience: prepare to prevent and manage impacts of extreme climate events.

  • RenegAID

    Comprehending Chaos A Framework for Understanding Disasters

    The purpose of this course is to move you beyond yourself and beyond the thinking that we all have: that the organized, institutional world as we know it will continue to exist.

  • Dani Slabaugh

    Construction Documents for Climate Justice: Democratic Design for Climate Resilient Communities

    By thinking about both the process and product of resilience design,
    we can help shift resilience design efforts to be more effective for
    marginalized communities on the front lines of climate change.

  • Dani Slabaugh

    Documentos de Construccion para la Justicia Climatica

    Pensando sobre ambos el proceso y el producto del diseño resiliente,
    podemos ayudar a cambiar los esfuerzos de diseño resiliente para ser
    más eficaces para las comunidades marginadas al frente del cambio
    climático.

  • Ricchi w/ Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Dreaming With Our Hands: On Autonomy, In(ter)dependence, and the Regaining of the Commons

    “It was like an atomic bomb went off,” says a local Boricua (as people born in Puerto Rico are often called) about the view of the mountains the day after Maria passed. “Every branch and every tree was torn apart and broken, and scattered everywhere. Every green area was gray and brown.”

  • Imagine Water Works

    Imagine Water Works' 2021 Hurricane Guide

    Welcome to hurricane season in Louisiana! We know this time of year is especially stressful, so we work hard to make this annual Imagine Water Works: Hurricane Season Guide as trauma-informed, practical, and accurate as possible.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Mutual Aid Disaster Relief: Lessons Learned

    We share these lessons, knowing that there are many like us: individuals, collectives, organizations, networks, and movements that lovingly, boldly do the work of revolution, striving to ground that work in an ethic of care and mutual aid. Disasters may soon become the new normal. There will be many times on the paths ahead of us when there aren’t easy answers. But we want to share with you what we gleaned from our time doing this work, in hopes that you can build off of the successes and avoid the mistakes of previous iterations of this type of organizing.

  • Dean Spade

    Mad Maps for the pandemic

    This is a difficult time, and most of us are under enormous pressure. We might be experiencing isolation, illness, income loss, fear for loved ones, loss of loved ones, anxiety, and many other painful circumstances. A mad map is a guide we can make for ourselves, usually best worked on in moments were we are feeling more centered or having more capacity, that we can turn to in moments where things go sideways or we feel ourselves slipping into more difficult states.

  • Cindy Milstein

    Mutual Fire Brigade

    In mid-November 2018, smoke from the hellfires of so-called California drifted to my home base, socalled Michigan, as humans and nonhumans on the West Coast struggled to breath, struggled not to die from the latest “historic” new normal of capital/state-fueled climate catastrophe.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Practicas Seguras Para Apoyo Mutuo y Distribucion de Alimentos Durante la Pandemia de Coronavirus

    COVID-19/Coronavirus es un virus contagioso que puede ser diseminado
    rápidamente por personas que no saben si son portadoras. La infección puede amenazar la vida, especialmente en personas ancianas o inmunodeprimidas.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Prisoners in Disaster: The legacy of abuse, exploitation and endangerment of prisoners in disaster.

    In times of unnatural disaster, prisoners caged within institutions in storm paths and mandatory evacuation zones are regularly abandoned to ‘shelter in place’ where they endure horrendous and dangerous conditions. Simultaneously, inmate labor is exploited by the state and corporations alike and prisoners are routinely put on the frontlines of climate catastrophes to face flames and floodwaters alike for next to nothing per day.

  • The New York Review & Molly Crabapple

    Puerto Rico’s DIY Disaster Relief

    Natural disasters have a way of clarifying things. They sweep away once-sturdy delusions, to reveal old treasures and scars.

  • Transition US

    Ready Together: An Emergency Preparedness Handbook for You and Your Neighbors

    Ready Together is an invitation to you to get together with your neighbors to prepare for whatever comes your way. Along with this Emergency Preparedness Handbook, ReadyTogether.Net provides additional news and resources.

  • Cristina Lugo w/ Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Recursos para trauma y arte terapéutico: información y actividades para niños, voluntarios y familias

    This resource binder was created for CAMBU (Las Marias, PR) in anticipation of presenting a workshop there that I put together (included in this binder). I felt that it would be important to help equip this CAM with some basic tools and resources that can help guide volunteers, teachers and parents in their work with youth.

  • Transition US

    Resilient & Ready Together: A Community Resilience and Disaster Preparedness Guide

    Our ability to meaningfully respond during times of disaster begins at home with us, rippling out into the radiating circles of support we create across our neighborhoods and communities.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Safety Practices for Mutual Aid Food & Supply Distribution During the Coronavirus Pandemic

    This zine is a quick compilation of the following resources accessible online to support mutual aid-based projects providing services for their communities amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • Rising Tide North America

    Staying Above Water: Global migration in the face of the climate crisis

    More than 30 years ago leading scientists from NASA began warning policymakers that global temperatures were warming as a result of the emissions of carbon and other greenhouse gasses.

  • The Nib, Vulpes, and Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    Solidarity for Survival: Pitching In When Disaster Hits

    In a time of climate catastrophe, living in New Orleans means being constantly aware of our tenuous relationship with the environment.

  • Hurricane Party - Ready New York?

    Storming the Breach: A Guide to the 2013 Hurricane Season

    What lies in your hands is a preliminary guide to inhabiting the catastrophe of the present, to laying out a strategy for the hurricanes to come, and to snatching the future from the jaws of defeat. There are many roads partisan, but only one warpath.

  • Strangers In A Tangled Wilderness

    Take What You Need and Compost the Rest

    Post-civilization theory posits that while civilization is, at its root, unsustainable and undesirable, the way we must move is forward, not backwards. This zine collects together six essays written by Margaret Killjoy that first appeared in the magazine Alan Moore’s Dodgem Logic between 2010-2011.

  • Shareable

    The Resilience We Want: A Guide into Making Your Community Space into a Hub for Local Resilience and Mutual Aid

    This guide introduces the vision and model of a “resilience hub” – a space where people can take more pride in their neighborhood, learn new skills together, provide for basic needs, prepare for disruptions, and build a more inclusive and joyful community.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    To Heal We Must Resist, To Resist We Must Heal: A Zine on Navigating Trauma

    Sometimes, it’s only through disasters that we unearth a power within that
    can’t be measured or defined. Sometimes darkness is our candle. Sometimes our wounds illuminate our path. And sometimes healing happens, in roundabout ways, all around and deep inside us.

  • Movement Generation

    Transition Is Inevitable, Justice Is Not: A Critical Framework For Just Recovery

    The disasters of the past year have filled our hearts and headlines with devastation, grief, and profound shock. We send our deepest love, compassion, and strength to those around the world who are now living in the aftermath of these disasters – rebuilding a sense of home, mourning lost ones, and making sense of their new reality.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    When Every Community Is Ground Zero: Pulling Each Other Through a Pandemic

    Radical solidarity through Covid-19 Community mobilizations for mutual aid and medical solidarity have formed in as many spaces as the new coronavirus (Covid-19) has spread.

  • Mutual Aid Disaster Relief

    When We Got Handed Gatorade We Danced in the Street

    All the things that you needed to know that you never wanted to know. A survivor's survival guide.

Banner for the Relief Toolkit.

Watch MADR’s YouTube Channel

See MADR on Instagram

mutualaiddisasterrelief

From March 18th through the 25th, Louisianans will From March 18th through the 25th, Louisianans will take action for our environment and our communities. From community dinners, an arts & culture fest, and coastal marsh grass plantings, we're coming together to celebrate our unique culture and advocate for our climate future. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zDEjmHoRiSsQPnqwTXwMC9ZNy2_7Xox5ixNGH7CLHyw/edit
Instagram post 17972019901978592 Instagram post 17972019901978592
Flood cleanup with our friends @cflmutualaid in th Flood cleanup with our friends @cflmutualaid in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian.
with our friends @hillbillieshelpinghillbillies cl with our friends @hillbillieshelpinghillbillies cleaning up from the Kentucky floods.
Kids often experience a lot of trauma and added re Kids often experience a lot of trauma and added responsibility following disasters. And they also often know just what to say and do to help others through difficult experiences. As part of our kids in community program, we like to provide safe spaces for children to play games, have fun, connect, offer support, be themselves, and be part of communal recovery efforts, like this Halloween party following Hurricane Ian. Doing activities like this helps to liberate the kid in all of us.
Solar trailer powering the people #hurricaneian Solar trailer powering the people #hurricaneian
Instagram post 17927020028556483 Instagram post 17927020028556483
This is what a liberated zone looks like. Ft. Myer This is what a liberated zone looks like. Ft. Myers, FL
Instagram post 17847153977866987 Instagram post 17847153977866987
Mutual Aid Disaster Relief mobile medical unit in Mutual Aid Disaster Relief mobile medical unit in Englewood, FL providing wound care, covid testing, blood pressure checks, dehydration treatment, and other wellness services to people impacted by Hurricane Ian. Sign in the van reads “Fight like hell for the living.”
Load More... Follow on Instagram
  • Podcast
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Tweets by mutualaidrelief
Go to Top