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Journal ArticleDOI

At Risk: Natural Hazards, People's Vulnerability, and Disasters.

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TLDR
The authors argue that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment and that the concept of vulnerability is central to an understanding of disasters and their prevention or mitigation, exploring the extent and ways in which people gain access to resources.
Abstract
Many disasters are a complex mix of natural hazards and human action. At Risk argues that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment. Published within the International Decade of Natural Hazard Reduction, this book suggests ways in which both the social and natural sciences can be analytically combined through a 'disaster pressure and release' model. Arguing that the concept of vulnerability is central to an understanding of disasters and their prevention or mitigation, the authors explore the extent and ways in which people gain access to resources. Individual chapters apply analytical concepts to famines and drought, biological hazards, floods, coastal storms, and earthquakes, volcanos and landslides - the hazards that become disasters'. Finally, the book draws practical and policy conclusions to promote a safer environment and reduce vulnerability.

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Book

The New Accountability: Environmental Responsibility Across Borders

Michael Mason
TL;DR: The New Accountability provides a fresh understanding of democratic accountability for transboundary and global harm and argues that environmental responsibility should be established in open public discussions about harm and risk as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Disaster Event to Political Crisis: A ''5C+A'' Framework for Analysis

TL;DR: The authors argued that the often problematic political consequences of disasters can be understood more fully by seeing them as "Maslowian Shocks" with strong revelatory components where public estimation of government disaster response may be analyzed along six dimensions: capability, competence, compassion, correctness, credibility, and anticipation.
Journal Article

Measuring disaster-resilient communities: a case study of coastal communities in Indonesia.

TL;DR: This study outlines a method for measuring community resilience capabilities using process and outcome indicators in 43 coastal communities in Indonesia and shows, community resiliency can be measured but any such measurement must be both location- and hazard-specific.
BookDOI

Disaster risk reduction approaches in Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the role of gender and social exclusion analysis in disaster risk management in Bangladesh, and propose a risk management strategy based on crop insurance and community-based risk reduction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Building vulnerability to hydro-geomorphic hazards: Estimating damage probability from qualitative vulnerability assessment using logistic regression

TL;DR: In this paper, a statistical methodology is developed that enables the estimation of damage probability for buildings by considering the example of a flash flood event in February 2013, where 124.5mm of rain fell within 3h (monthly mean: 29.3mm) triggering a flood that inundated at least 0.4 km 2 of urban settlements along the channel, affecting more than 280 buildings, 23 of a total of 53 bridges (pedestrian, vehicle and railway), and leading to the partial collapse of sections of the main road, paralyzing central parts of the city for
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Book ChapterDOI

8. The Rules of the Game

John Davis, +1 more