ABSTRACT

There is a perennial gap between theory and practice, between academia and active professionals in the field of disaster management. This gap means that valuable lessons are not learned and people die or suffer as a result. This book opens a dialogue between theory and practice. It offers vital lessons to practitioners from scholarship on natural hazards, disaster risk management and reduction and developments studies, opening up new insights in accessible language with practical applications. It also offers to academics the insights of the enormous experience practitioners have accumulated, highlighting gaps in research and challenging assumptions and theories against the reality of experience. Disaster Management covers issues in all phases of the disaster cycle: preparedness, prevention, response and recovery. It also addresses cross-cutting issues including political, economic and social factors that influence differential vulnerability, and key areas of practice such as vulnerability mapping, early warning, infrastructure protection, emergency management, reconstruction, health care and education, and gender issues. The team of international authors combine their years of experience in research and the field to offer vital lessons for practitioners, academics and students alike.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

Who, what and why

part I|112 pages

Prevention and risk reduction

chapter 5|18 pages

People-centred early warning

Juan-Carlos Villagrán de León

chapter 7|10 pages

Many Strong Voices for climate change education

Examples from Belize and Timor-Leste

part II|87 pages

Response and recovery

chapter 9|17 pages

Emergency and disaster planning

chapter 13|19 pages

Post-disaster recovery planning

Introductory notes on its challenges and potentials

part III|56 pages

Regional perspectives

chapter 15|19 pages

Disaster risk management in Latin America and the Caribbean

Four decades of evolution and change, 1970–2010

chapter 16|19 pages

Disaster risk management in the Asia-Pacific

Emerging trends and directions