Handbook of Disaster Research

Front Cover
Havidán Rodríguez, William Donner, Joseph E. Trainor
Springer, Nov 16, 2017 - Social Science - 619 pages

Recent disasters, such as the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, bomb explosions in London, Hurricane Katrina, the Pakistan Earthquake, floods in Central America, and landslides in Indonesia, among many others, have resulted in an extensive loss of life, social disruption, significant economic impacts to local and national economies, and have made headline news in countries throughout the world. Thus the Handbook of Disaster Research is a timely and much needed contribution to the field of disasters. The editors of this Handbook have brought together a comprehensive and interdisciplinary volume with a diverse and international group of contributors.

The Handbook is based on the principle that disasters are social constructions and focuses on social science disaster research. Attention is given to conceptual issues dealing with the concept "disaster" and to methodological issues relating to research on disasters, including Geographic Information Systems as a useful research tool and its implications for future research; how disaster research is increasingly being used in the emergency management curriculum; and how research is useful in dealing with emergency operations. The Handbook also includes a number of essays focusing on various types of vulnerabilities. In addition, there are discussions on community processes that are evoked by disasters, including warnings, search and rescue, coordination, and organizational adaptation, as well as, dealing with death and injury, and recovery, and the role of the media in disasters; special attention is given to emergency systems in several nation states. The Handbook also includes contributions focusing on the relationship between disaster and development, the popular culture of disasters, new dimensions of disaster research, as well as projections of disasters into the future.

Disasters allow the opportunity for social scientists to study human behavior in which adaptation, resilience and innovation are often more clearly revealed than in "normal" and stable times. The Handbook of Disaster Research provides an interdisciplinary and international approach to disasters with theoretical, methodological, and practical applications.

 

Contents

Perspectives on Disasters
2
An Evolving Concept
3
2 The Crisis Approach
23
3 Contributions of Technological and Natech Disaster Research to the Social Science Disaster Paradigm
39
A Heuristic Approach
61
Contemporary Issues in Disasters
84
5 Resilience and Disasters
85
Understanding Resilience and Vulnerability Through the Lens of Culture
109
15 Methodological Issues in Disaster Research
288
16 The Role of Geographic Information Science Technology in Disaster Management
311
17 Computer Simulation and Optimization
331
18 Morbidity and Mortality Associated with Disasters
357
Communities in Disaster
384
19 Community Innovation and Disasters
387
20 CommunityBased Disaster Risk Management
411
21 PopulationCommunity Displacement
430

7 Terrorism as Hazard and Disaster
122
8 Climate Change and Disasters
145
Unified System or Impossible Mission?
160
Inequality Social Stratification and Disasters
179
10 Race Class Ethnicity and Disaster Vulnerability
181
Foundations and New Directions for Research and Practice
204
12 People with Disabilities and Disasters
225
13 Children and Disasters
243
14 Social Capital in Disaster Research
263
Methods and Methodological Issues in Disaster Research
287
Communication and the Mass Media
447
22 Communicating Imminent Risk
449
Navigating Old Challenges and New Opportunities in the Digital Age
478
24 Social Media in Disaster Communication
497
Managing Disasters
519
Coordination
520
Key Attributes Expectations and Implications
551
27 PostDisaster Sheltering Temporary Housing and Permanent Housing Recovery
569
The Unrealized Promise of Institutional Resilience
595
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About the author (2017)

Havidán Rodríguez is the President of the University at Albany of the State University of New York (SUNY). However, most of his work for this Handbook took place in his previous role as Founding Provost & Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, and a tenured professor in the Department of Sociology & Anthropology, at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. He also served as director of the Disaster Research Center (DRC) at the University of Delaware. He was the principal investigator for the Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) Program: Training the Next Generation of Disaster Researchers, funded by NSF. Dr. Rodríguez is the co-editor (with Quarantelli and Dynes) of the Handbook of Disaster Research (2006).

Joseph E. Trainor is an Associate Professor of Public Policy and Administration at the University of Delaware (UD). He is the current director of the UD Disaster Science and Management Degree Programs and is a Core Faculty member at the Disaster Research Center (DRC).

William Donner is Associate Professor of Sociology and Disaster Studies M.A. Director at the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley. Research interests include hazard warnings, epidemiology, demography, and statistical applications in disaster research.