Cover image for Community disaster recovery and resiliency : exploring global opportunities and challenges
Title:
Community disaster recovery and resiliency : exploring global opportunities and challenges
Publication Information:
Boca Raton, Fla. : CRC Press, c2011
Physical Description:
li, 582 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9781420088229

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30000010302789 HV553 C664 2011 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Once again nature's fury has taken a toll in pain, suffering, and lives lost. In recognition of the need for a rapid and appropriate response, CRC Press will donate $5 to the American Red Cross for every copy of Community Disaster Recovery and Resiliency: Exploring Global Opportunities and Challenges sold.

In the past, societies would learn from disasters and move the location of their urban development to safer areas, allowing naturally occurring ecosystems to maintain themselves and for societies to exist symbiotically with the environment. These days, however, it seems that society no longer takes cues from the environment but rather relies on technical advancement to attempt to control and overcome the environment, sometimes with wholly unsuccessful and even catastrophic results.

Emphasizing non-traditional approaches to disaster recovery and rebuilding communities, Community Disaster Recovery and Resiliency: Exploring Global Opportunities and Challenges brings together leading research from top academics and scholars on the different ways various societies have experienced disasters, learned from them, and revised their thinking about building community preparedness and resiliency pre- and post-disaster.

Provides a clear, concise, and up-to-date understanding of best practices for rebuilding community institutions and community development after a disaster Focuses on integrated solutions for ecological restoration and community development in disaster recovery planning and implementation Compares and contrasts community rebuilding between different nations at different stages of development, economic power, and stability Includes case studies that illustrate best practices, integrating the concept of community and community rebuilding for local, national, and international stakeholders

All chapters offer diverse community examples that form a framework for comparing best practices. They focus on integrated solutions for ecological restoration and community development and explain how communities can reduce their vulnerability to disasters and reduce recovery time following a disaster. The book indentifies the opportunities and challenges communities are most likely to face on the road to recovery and supplies the interdisciplinary, social scientific understanding required to effectively address those challenges.


Author Notes

DeMond Shondell Miller is a Professor of Sociology and Director of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Institute for Research and Community Service at Rowan University (Glassboro, New Jersey). He has worked as principal investigator to facilitate research projects involving natural and human-induced ecological disasters, environmental issues, and community satisfaction. His primary area of specialization is environmental sociology (disaster studies and the study of the social construction of place), community development and community organizing, and social impact assessment. Dr. Miller has presented and published several professional papers; recent examples of such work can be found in Space and Culture: An International Journal of Social Spaces, International Journal of the Humanities, Journal of Black Studies, The Journal of Public Management and Social Policy, Sociological Spectrum, and The International Journal of Culture, Tourism and Hospitality Research. Recently, he has contributed to several edited volumes including Through the Eye of Katrina: Social Justice in the United States and The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe ; he is the co-author of Hurricane Katrina and the Redefinition of Landscape with Jason D. Rivera (Lexington Press) and coeditor of African American and Community Engagement in Higher Education: Community Service, Service Learning and Community-Based Research with S. Evans, C. Taylor, and M. Dunlap (State University of New York Press).

Jason David Rivera is a Research Associate in the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. His research focuses on social vulnerability to natural and manmade disasters with an emphasis on minority experiences. Additionally, his research highlights institutional structures that have historically perpetuated social vulnerability within minority and low-income communities. These research findings have been incorporated into policy recommendations that make mitigation, response, and recovery more efficient. Examples of his work can be found in the Journal of Black Studies, Journal of Applied Security Research: Prevention and Response in Asset Protection, Terrorism and Violence, the Journal of Public Management and Social Policy, Sociological Spectrum, The Journal for the Study of Radicalism, Space and Culture, The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe, Through the Eye of the Storm: Social Justice in the United States, and Dangers in the Incommensurability of Globalization: Socio-Political Volatilities. He is coauthor of Hurricane Katrina and the Redefinition of Landscape, with DeMond S. Miller (Lexington Press).


Table of Contents

Liesel Ritchie and Kathleen Tierney and Brandi GilbertSanjaya BhatiaBethany L. BrownDouglas Paton and Li-Ju JangEmily Chamlee-Wright and Virgil Henry StorrKevin F. AdlerJonathan RosenbergMichèle CompanionArul Chib and Anisha Baghudana and Shilvia KasdaniJoel C. Yelin and Demond Shondell MillerThom CurtisAdisa Ademola Lateef and Agunbiade Ojo MelvinAnita Bledsoe-GardnerEsther LeemannJennifer Duyne BarensteinAlka DhamejaMD. Mahfuzar Rahman ChowdhuryUma MeduryJou-Juo ChuGlenn L. StarksKalliopi Sapountzaki and Anna PapachatziJulia Becker and Wendy Saunders and Lesley Hopkins and Kim Wright and David JohnstonAlex Altshuler and Faisal Azaiza and Yael YishaiJason David Rivera and Demond Shondell Miller
List of Figuresp. xi
List of Tablesp. xiii
Forewordp. xvii
Prefacep. xxi
Acknowledgmentsp. xxiii
Editorsp. xxv
Contributorsp. xxvii
Introductionp. xxxv
Section I Opportunities and Challenges for Building a Community-Based Institutional InfrastructureDemond Shondell Miller
1 Disaster Preparedness among Community-Based Organizations in the City and County of San Francisco: Serving the Most Vulnerablep. 3
2 Safe Schools for the Community: A Case and Tool for Disaster-Proof Schoolsp. 41
3 Opportunities and Challenges of Battered Women's Shelters in the Aftermath of a Disasterp. 63
Section II Opportunities and Challenges for Social and Cultural RevitalizationDemond Shondell Miller
4 Disaster Resilience: Exploring All Hazards and Cross-Cultural Perspectivesp. 81
5 Community Resilience in New Orleans East: Deploying the Cultural Toolkit within a Vietnamese American Communityp. 101
6 Social Capital after a Disaster: A Case Study of the 2008 Flood in Cedar Rapids, Iowap. 125
Section III Opportunities and Challenges for Economic RecoveryJason David Rivera
7 Natural Disasters, Climate Change, and Recovery: The Sustainability Question in Post-Ivan Grenadap. 173
8 Information Commodification and Social Capital in Local Street Marketsp. 205
9 Role of Information and Communication Technologies in Disaster Rehabilitation in Agriculture and Ecotourism: Bukit Lawang, Indonesiap. 223
Section IV Opportunities and Challenges for Public Health and SafetyJason David Rivera
10 The Irrawaddy Crisis: Myanmar and Cyclone Nargis-Challenges and Opportunities for Changep. 253
11 Challenge of the Worried Well in the Event of a Pandemic or Terrorist Attackp. 269
12 Aborigines' and Migrant Settlers' Crisis and Reconstruction Efforts in Two Yoruba Communities in Southwestern Nigeriap. 287
13 An Assault on the Community's Fabric: Tragedy, Challenges, and Opportunities of School Shootingsp. 303
Section V Opportunities and Challenges for Housing and Housing PolicyChristopher Gonzalez
14 Housing Reconstruction in Post-Mitch Nicaragua: Two Case Studies from the Communities of San Dionisio and Ocotalp. 319
15 Housing Reconstruction in Tamil Nadu: The Disaster after the Tsunami in Indiap. 343
16 Building Earthquake-Resilient Communitiesp. 363
Section VI Opportunities and Challenges for Public-Private Partnerships in the Twenty-First CenturyChristopher Gonzalez
17 Bridging the Public-Private Partnership in Disaster Management in Bangladeshp. 395
18 Building Disaster-Resilient Communities: The Public-Private Partnership Approachp. 423
19 Patterns of Public-Private Partnership in Community Reconstruction: The Case of Taiwan after the Chi-Chi Earthquakep. 447
Section VII Opportunities and Challenges for Disaster MitigationJason David Rivera
20 How Nations Should Develop Disaster Plans for Mitigation, Preparedness, Response, and Recovery: Lessons Learned from Major International Disastersp. 477
21 Private Resilience Responses against Collective Recovery Interests: The Case of the Mega-Fires of Ilia, Greece, in August 2007p. 497
22 Preplanning for Recoveryp. 525
23 Preparedness for Emergency: Learning from War-Caused Disaster in Israelp. 551
24 Conclusion: From Recovery to Resilience: Long-Lasting Social Change and Disaster Mitigationp. 565
Indexp. 575