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E-raamat: Routledge Handbook of Disaster Response and Recovery

Edited by (Kansas State University, USA), Edited by
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The Routledge Handbook of Disaster Response and Recovery covers the two post-disaster stages of the disaster cycle and presents am extensive and cutting-edge overview of their many considerations.

Organized into two parts, Response and Recovery, this handbook details the history, theories, methods, debates, and emerging issues in the stages of response and recovery. Using a transdisciplinary approach, the myriad topics examined in this handbook include search and rescue, myths related to disaster response, technological methods for response, recovery among vulnerable populations, and the intersection of disasters and mental health. Contributors discuss these issues both globally as well as country- and disaster-specific.

This book is an essential guide and reference not only for scholars engaged in disaster research, but also for undergraduate and graduate students, policy makers, disaster managers, international and supranational agencies, and humanitarian and volunteer organizations engaged in disaster management.



The Handbook of Disaster Response and Recovery covers the two post-disaster stages of the disaster cycle and presents a comprehensive and cutting-edge overview of their many considerations.

Arvustused

"The Routledge Handbook of Disaster Response and Recovery highlights not only the critical importance of response to and recovery from disasters, but the diversity of approaches to these processes and the ways in which they are studied and seen by people around the world. Understanding the scope with which different experts, people, and cultures comprehend and move through these spaces is absolutely essential to improving our progress through them, and works like this propel our ability to discuss these issues through varied lenses."

Jennifer Trivedi, Disaster Research Center, University of Delaware

The Routledge Handbook of Disaster Response and Recovery represents a significant contribution to your understanding of these two phases of the emergency management cycle. Spanning topical areas from nuts and bolts concepts to real-world and applied situations, this Handbook provides a comprehensive accounting of current challenges and opportunities for response and recovery. The editors have curated a volume worthy of not only a place on the bookshelf, but one that will be pulled down again and again as a reference manual for those interested in diving into the challenges and solutions presented within.

Christopher T. Emrich, School of Public Administration, University of Central Florida

List of figures

List of tables

List of boxes

Introduction

Part I: Disaster Response

Section I: Disaster Response: Key Elements and Activities

1. Key Elements and Activities of Disaster Response

2. Search and Rescue (SAR)

3. Emergency Medical Care

4. Debris Management and Removal

Section II: Channeling Disaster Response

5. Flash Appeal as a Framework for Disaster Response

6. Post-Disaster Needs Assessments (PDNAs)

7. Emergency Relief Flows and Determinants of Disaster Aid

8. Social Networks and Emergency Response

Section III: Disaster Relief and Aid Efforts


9. Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) as Providers and Distributors of Disaster Assistance

10. Participation of Domestic and Foreign Military Forces in Disaster Relief

11. International and Domestic Diplomacy with Disaster Aid

12. Flow and Management of Disaster Relief: The Case of Bangladesh

13. Humanitarianism and Volunteerism in Disaster Response: The Case of Sikh Volunteers during the 2022 Australia Floods

Section IV: Disaster Response Issues and Visions

14. Biases and Vulnerable Populations in Relief Distribution

15. Myths Related to Disaster Response

16. Outbreak of Epidemics during Disaster Response

17. Technology and Technological Methods in Disaster Response

Part II: Disaster Recovery

Section V: Disaster Recovery: Key Elements and Activities

18. Key Elements and Activities of Disaster Recovery

19. Disaster Recovery Cycle

20. Disaster Recovery Outcomes

21. Sustainable Disaster Recovery

Section VI: Disaster Recovery Theories and Approaches

22. Disaster Recovery Models

23. Reconfiguring the Kates-Pijawka Recovery Model for a New Era

24. Evolution of Recovery Studies and Recovery Duration

25. Social Science Methodologies in Disaster Recovery Research

Section VII: Disaster Recovery Contexts

26. The Role of Households and Communities in Disaster Response and Recovery: The Case of the Pacific and Small Island Developing States

27. Opportunities that Arise during a Crisis: The Case of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

28. Sources and Distribution of Internal and External Funding: The Case of Housing Reconstruction after the 2015 Nepal Earthquake

29. Recovery Among Vulnerable Populations: The Case of 'Forgotten People' after the 2015 Nepal Earthquake

30. Computer Modeling to Inform Disaster Recovery: The Case of Hurricane Matthew in North Carolina

Section VIII: Disaster Recovery Issues and Visions

31. Disaster Recovery and Businesses

32. Disaster Recovery and Heritage Buildings

33. Disaster Recovery and Mental Health

34. COVID-19 and Disaster Response and Recovery

Conclusions and futures

Index

Bimal Kanti Paul is a professor of Geography and Geospatial Sciences at Kansas State University who specializes in various aspects of environmental hazards. He has contributed to the field by integrating the social sciences with the physical sciences to address environmental concerns more holistically. Paul has compiled an outstanding publication record, including seven books on environmental hazards as single or co-author. Recently, Stanford University identified Paul among the top 2% of researchers in the world. He was also editor of the Geographical Review (20132015), book review editor of The Professional Geographer (20112012), and is a fellow of the American Association of Geographers.

Luke Juran is a professor in the Department of Geography and at the Virginia Water Resources Research Center at Virginia Tech. Jurans research focuses on the human ecology of water and disaster reconstruction with an emphasis on the implementation of community-level water and sanitation systems after disasters. Jurans research investigates issues related to social vulnerability, water quality, and access to water with particular attention paid to gender and human-environment interactions. In addition to ongoing projects in India, Juran has conducted and supervised research in Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Mauritius, Mexico, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, and the United States.