ABSTRACT

At Risk reasserts the significance of the human factor in disasters. Establishing that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment, the book argues that disaster mitigation is rooted in the potential humans have to understand their vulnerability and to take common action.
Famines and drought, biological hazards, floods, coastal storms, earthquakes, volcanoes and landslides: At Risk draws practical and policy conclusions with a view to disaster reduction and the promotion of a safer environment.

part |2 pages

Part I FRAMEWORK AND THEORY

part |2 pages

Part II VULNERABILITY AND HAZARD TYPES

chapter 4|26 pages

FAMINE AND NATURAL HAZARDS

chapter 5|22 pages

BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS

chapter 6|22 pages

FLOODS

chapter 7|22 pages

SEVERE COASTAL STORMS

chapter 8|26 pages

EARTHQUAKES, VOLCANOES, AND LANDSLIDES

part |2 pages

Part III ACTION FOR DISASTER REDUCTION

chapter 9|22 pages

VULNERABILITY, RELIEF, AND RECONSTRUCTION

chapter 10|22 pages

TOWARDS A SAFER ENVIRONMENT