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The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)

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TLDR
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assists states and localities overwhelmed by, or at risk from, disasters as discussed by the authors, and co-ordinates emergency management activities and planning for the continuity of government should national security be threatened.
Abstract
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assists states and localities overwhelmed by, or at risk from, disasters. FEMA also co-ordinates emergency management activities and planning for the continuity of government should national security be threatened. Since 1979 FEMA has administered a range of authorities that enable the agency to serve as the primary source of federal, technical, and financial assistance for emergency management. Among the types of aid provided through FEMA programs are grants and material to help disaster victims meet pressing needs such as food and shelter, education and training programs to improve the response capabilities of non-federal officials, and mobile communications equipment. FEMA exercises little regulatory authority, but directives that underlie the agency's mission authorise the agency to establish standards for reconstruction of buildings after a disaster declaration is issued, for the construction of federal buildings in earthquake-prone areas, and for the operation of first responder equipment. FEMA has responded to, and has helped communities prepare for, terrorist attacks in the United States. The Office of Homeland Security (OHS), established by President Bush subsequent to the attacks in 2001, has a similar, but more encompassing, mission related to disasters caused by terrorist actions. Congressional debate on the contours and framework for federal administration of homeland security might include consideration of FEMA's mission, the extent to which that mission overlaps with the assignments given the new OHS, and a new structure or set of authorities for that agency.

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A methodology for estimating business interruption loss caused by flood disasters: insights from business surveys after Tokai Heavy Rain in Japan

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a probabilistic methodology for estimating the business interruption loss of industrial sectors as an extension of current methodology, and the functional forms and parameters were selected and calibrated based on survey data obtained from businesses located in the inundated area at the time of the 2000 Tokai Heavy Rain in Japan.
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The Effect of Prenatal Natural Disaster Exposure on School Outcomes

TL;DR: Regression results suggest that children exposed to hurricanes prenatally have lower scores on third grade standardized tests in math and reading, and those exposed to flooding or tornadoes also have somewhat lower math scores.
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An Integrated Method Combining Remote Sensing Data and Local Knowledge for the Large-Scale Estimation of Seismic Loss Risks to Buildings in the Context of Rapid Socioeconomic Growth: A Case Study in Tangshan, China

TL;DR: An integrated method that combines remote sensing data and local knowledge to resolve building loss risks is presented and the total floor area of the residential and public office buildings in central Tangshan in 2009 was 3.99% lower than the corresponding area number obtained by a conventional earthquake loss estimation project.
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A Simplified Approach to Joint Shear Behavior Prediction of RC Beam-Column Connections

TL;DR: An extensive experimental database of reinforced concrete beam-column connections subjected to cyclic lateral loading has been constructed, and a complete RC joint shear stress vs. strain model (including post-peak behavior) is suggested using simplified jointShear stress and strain models at peak response.
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Unreinforced Masonry Walls: Nonlinear Finite Element Analysis with a Unified Constitutive Model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a unified model for characterizing the behavior of masonry structures based on the Disturbed State Concept (DSC) with modified hierarchical single yield surface (HISS) plasticity.