Long-Term Community Recovery from Natural Disasters

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A01=Daniel J Alesch
A01=Lucy A. Arendt
andrew
Author_Daniel J Alesch
Author_Lucy A. Arendt
Building Disaster Resistance
Category=JBFF
Cellular Automata
city
Community Disaster
Community Recovery
communitys
Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports
disaster recovery process case studies
Disaster Resiliency: Practical Steps for Local Governments to Facilitate Recovery
disaster risk reduction
EF5 Tornado
emergency management
emergency response planning
Enhanced Fujita Scale
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Extreme Natural Hazard Event
Factors Affecting the Nature and Extent of Community Disasters
Factors Affecting the Pace and the Likelihood Of Recovery
FEMA
FEMA 2013a
FEMA Trailer
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Local Government Ofcials
Local Ofcials
Long Term Community Recovery
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National Flood Insurance Program
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ninth
postdisaster social impacts
Presidential Disaster Declaration
recovery policy analysis
Recreational Vehicles
Richter Magnitude
socioeconomic vulnerability assessment
The Base Case
urban resilience strategies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781466593022
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Nov 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Today, governmental efforts at long-term community recovery from a natural disaster consist primarily of rebuilding the physical artifact of the community. This entails reestablishing vital community services and infrastructure and creating housing to replace that which has been lost. While restoring the built environment of a disaster area is essential, alone it is not sufficient to achieve complete recovery.

Long-Term Community Recovery from Natural Disasters presents what the authors have learned over two decades from more than two dozen community disasters in and outside the United States. Based on their experiences, they provide a set of practical, cost-effective steps for both reducing the consequences of extreme natural hazard events on communities and for facilitating community recovery.

To achieve long-term recovery, it is essential that we understand how communities develop and/or decay in the absence of an extreme natural hazard event. Then, by recognizing how these events disrupt "normal" development and change, we can determine which parts of the community have to become reestablished or made more functional so that the community can achieve long-term viability. The authors explain how this appreciation of community dynamics and the consequences of extreme natural hazard events enables us to identify those critical points for policy intervention at appropriate levels of government. The combined practical and philosophical insight presented in this book will be valuable not only to policy makers but to scholars as well.

A professor of management, Lucy A. Arendt’s research into planning and decision making spans more than two decades. Her interest in decision making in the wake of extreme natural hazard events led to a conviction that the best way to facilitate recovery is to engage in pre-disaster planning that engages a diversity of stakeholders and that builds collective efficacy and yields action intended to mitigate the consequences of disaster. This book integrates her thinking and research on human action and inaction when faced with the devastating consequences that result from the collision of extreme natural hazard events and human decisions.

A former senior social scientist with RAND, where he focused on urban phenomena, and, more recently, as a professor of public administration and planning, Daniel J. Alesch has become a seasoned, skilled student and analyst of disasters, disaster recovery, and disaster mitigation strategies and policies. In this book, he brings what he has learned over more than three decades of field experience, including multi-year analyses of each of more than two-dozen communities as they struggled with the immediate and long term consequences of an extreme natural hazard event.

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