Research

Selected publications

A curated list. For the full record, including chapters, working papers, and policy contributions, see Google Scholar.

  1. 01

    Staupe-Delgado, R., van Zandvoort, K., & Bremer, S. (2026). Beyond the storm season: The polyrhythms of coastal hazardscapes on the Kūaotunu Peninsula. Time & Society, 35(1), 97–121.

  2. 02

    Staupe-Delgado, R., & Bartoszewicz, M. G. (2025). A Time of Disastrous Anticipations: Essays on Life in the Shadow of Catastrophe. Routledge.

  3. 03

    Lie, L. B., & Staupe-Delgado, R. (2025). Understanding natural hazard phenomena and risks from the perspective of ‘instrumental realism’: Examples from Geiranger and Lyngen, Norway. In A Time of Disastrous Anticipations (pp. 180–203). Routledge.

  4. 04

    Wesal Zaman, A., Rubin, O., & Staupe-Delgado, R. (2024). The challenges experts face during creeping crises: the curse of complacency. Policy & Politics, 52(1), 131–152.

  5. 05

    Staupe-Delgado, R., Engström, A., & Andres Frugone Cádiz, S. (2023). Conceptualizing AMR as a creeping disaster in terms of pace and space. In Steering Against Superbugs (pp. 43–54). Oxford University Press.

  6. 06

    Staupe-Delgado, R., & Rubin, O. (2023). What makes an acute emergency? Temporal manifestation patterns and global health emergencies. Third World Quarterly, 44(8), 1790–1806.

  7. 07

    Staupe-Delgado, R., & Díaz Villarreal, L. E. (2023). Bracing for turmoil: temporalities of livelihood adaptation among informal workers in Facatativá, Colombia. Oxford Development Studies, 51(3), 233–251.

  8. 08

    Staupe-Delgado, R. (2022). Disasters and Life in Anticipation of Slow Calamity: Perspectives from the Colombian Andes. Routledge.

  9. 09

    Staupe-Delgado, R., & Rubin, O. (2022). Challenges associated with creeping disasters in disaster risk science and practice: considering disaster onset dynamics. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 13(1), 1–11.

  10. 10

    Staupe-Delgado, R., & Rubin, O. (2022). Living through and with the global HIV/AIDS pandemic: distinct ‘pandemic practices’ and temporalities. Social Science & Medicine, 296, 114809.