ABSTRACT
Record breaking hurricane seasons, tornados, tsunamis, earthquakes, and intentional acts of mass-casualty violence, give lie to the delusion that disasters are the anomaly and not the norm. Disaster management is rooted in the fundamental belief that we can protect ourselves. Even if we cannot control all the causes, we can prepare and respond. We
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
SECTION I: INTRODUCTION, THEORETICAL CONSTRUCTS, AND CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS
part |2 pages
SECTION II: CASE STUDIES AND LESSONS LEARNED: U.S. NATURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL DISASTERS
part |2 pages
SECTION III: CASE STUDIES AND LESSONS LEARNED: INTERNATIONAL DISASTERS
part |2 pages
SECTION IV: FIRST RESPONSE AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
part |2 pages
SECTION V: HUMAN, PERSONAL, AND INTERPERSONAL ISSUES
part |2 pages
SECTON VI: PLANNING, PREVENTION, AND PREPAREDNESS