Based on your readings thus far from the text and your own research, discuss disaster life cycles. Discuss disaster tradition and theory. Finally, discuss the types of disaster research.
400 words
Lecture Notes: New & Emerging Disasters and Hazards
There are four (4) phases of Comprehensive Emergency Management which make up the foundation for the all-hazards approach to emergency management. Those four phases are: mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. They are so much a staple in the field that they deserve listing by bullet point:
It largely goes undisputed that natural disasters have increased in number in recent decades. The charity group, Oxfam, in 2007 reported that disasters have quadrupled in the last two decades. The world suffered about 120 natural disasters per year in the early 1980s, and currently suffers about 500 per year. The number of people affected by extreme natural disasters has increased by almost 70% (from 174 million a year between 1985 to 1994 to 254 million people a year between 1995 to 2004). Likewise, floods and wind-storms have increased from 60 events in 1980 to 240 a year in 2007, with flooding up six-fold.
What are the risks (threat or hazards)? Natural: Hurricanes, Wind Storms, Tornadoes, Flooding, Snow, Ice Storms, Fire, Lightening, Earth Quakes, Disease, Droughts, Solar, Tsunamis, etc. Technological Risk: Power outages, Structural failures, Chemical Plant Exposures and Explosions, Hazardous Material Releases, Transportation Crashes, Grid Failures, Cyber Failures, etc. Human Risk: Terrorism, Crime, Health Risks, Accidents, Economic Failure, Social Decline and Upheaval, etc.
There are many reasons for the increased number of disasters. One, it may very well be that better reporting is the ultimate cause of the increase. A lot more organizations and people are devoted to recording and documenting disasters than before. Two, the world has seen an increase in population, and along with this increase, there is a growing tendency for people to move to coastal areas, and build residences in high danger areas. The continual building of structures next to foreseeable dangers (like building high schools next to highways, or glass skyscrapers on top of earthquake zones) will likely only stop when society gets tired of all the premises liability lawsuits every year.