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Geographies of Disaster Risk Reduction Practices: New Approaches, Progress, and Contemporary Challenges [Kõva köide]

(GDC Memorial College (Chaudhary Bansi Lal University), India)
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In the intricate web of socio-environmental crises across diverse geographical landscapes, grasping the intricacies of geographies and socio-spatial ecologies in disaster risk reduction practices is indispensable for global socio-ecological sustainability. In response to this imperative, this volume pioneers the development of disaster risk reduction understanding within the disaster research domain.



This authored volume is structured into two parts. The initial part extensively explores the fundamentals of geographies in disaster risk reduction practices, encompassing concepts, methodologies, and challenges in disaster management, disaster preparedness, response, relief operations, resource allocation, disaster medicine, information dissemination, recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction. It also delves into various applications and emerging trends, management techniques, applied practices through contemporary case studies, socio-ecological challenges in disaster risk reduction, and sustainability considerations in management practices.



The latter part focuses on real-world case studies within geographies and socio-spatial ecologies to examine scenarios of disaster risks, management practices, and community challenges specific to coastal regions. These case studies encompass topics such as mangrove vegetation health risks and stress, climate change adaptation strategies at the local level, shoreline change and vulnerability assessments, geographies of coastal hazards, societal vulnerability during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as analyses of natural hazards and disaster risks, among others. This work enriches the scientific and practical understanding of mitigating disaster risks, and advocating for stakeholder integration in disaster policy planning among planners, scientists, researchers, professionals, government officials, students, and anyone else engaged in disaster research globally.
Foreword; S. K. Sinha

Part I. Geographies of Disaster Risk Reduction Practices: Fundamentals

Chapter
1. Introduction to Geographies of Disaster Management

Chapter
2. Approaches and Progress of Disaster Preparedness

Chapter
3. Disaster Response, Relief Operations, Resource Management, and
Society

Chapter
4. Disaster Medicine: Approaches and Practices

Chapter
5. Reporting Information, Disaster Recovery, Rehabilitation, and
Reconstruction in Disaster Risk Management

Chapter
6. Geospatial Technologies in Disaster Risk Reduction: Applications
and Emerging Trends

Chapter
7. Contemporary Cases of Hazard/Disaster: Causes, Management Methods,
and Applied Practices

Chapter
8. Socio-ecological Challenges in Disaster Risk Reduction Practices:
Towards Sustainable Solutions

Part II. Geographies of Disaster Risk Reduction Practices: Real-World Case
Studies in the Context of Coastal Geographies and Socio-Spatial Ecologies

Chapter
9. Modelling and Monitoring of Mangrove Vegetation Health Risks and
Stress using LANDSAT Satellite Data

Chapter
10. Examining Climate Change/Variability and Local Adaptation
Strategy in the Traditional Marine Fishing Community of Coastal Bengal, India


Chapter
11. Reviewing Modelling Approaches for Climate Crisis Adaptation: A
Comprehensive Analysis of Multi-Risk Assessment in Coastal Regions

Chapter
12. Monitoring and Modelling of Coastal Shoreline Change and
Vulnerability Using Geospatial Technologies: The Case of Coastal 24 Parganas,
India

Chapter
13. Role and Mandate of the NDRF in Coastal Disaster Risk Reduction
in India: An Analytical Assessment

Chapter
14. The COVID-19 Pandemic, Societal Vulnerability, and Management
Practices of Traditional Marine Fishermen: A Village-level Correlates of
Coastal Bengal, India

Chapter
15. Researching Natural Hazards and Disaster Risk: Addressing
Scientific Challenges
Kousik Das Malakar is a socio-ecological geographer, GIS analyst, and researcher specializing in climate change and policy. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography at GDC Memorial College, India. Dr. Malakar earned his Ph.D. from the Central University of Haryana, India. He holds a masters degree in social science geography from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi, and a bachelors degree in the same discipline from Vidyasagar University, Medinipur. His research interests include the climate crisis, socio-ecological systems, coastal environments, sustainability, disaster studies, participatory policy planning, and geospatial technologies.