ABSTRACT
Disasters both natural and human-induced are leading to spiralling costs in terms of human lives, lost livelihoods and damaged assets and businesses. Yet these consequences and the financial and human crises that follow catastrophes can often be traced to policies unsuited to the emerging scales of the problems they confront, and the lack of institutional capacity to implement planning and prevention or to manage disasters. This book seeks to overcome this mismatch and to guide development of a policy and institutional framework. For the first time it brings together into a coherent framework the insights of public policy, institutional design and emergency and disaster management.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|46 pages
Constructing the Problem
part II|114 pages
Constructing the Response
chapter 8|16 pages
Institutional Settings for Emergencies and Disasters
part III|10 pages
Constructing the Future