Preface Introduction to Emergency Management by William L. Waugh, Jr., and Ronald John Hy The Function of Emergency Management by Ronald John Hy and William L. Waugh, Jr. Earthquakes by Richard T. Sylves Volcanic Hazards by William L. Waugh, Jr. Hurricanes by William L. Waugh, Jr. Floods by Beverly A. Cigler and Raymond J. Burby Tornadoes by Loran B. Smith and David T. Jervis Wildfire Hazards by Diane Moskow-McKenzie and John C. Freemuth Drought by Donald A. Wilhite Hazardous Material Transport Accidents by and Jeanette M. Trauth and Thomas J. Pavlak Nuclear Emergencies by Joan Aron Air Disasters by Margaret Baty Structural Failures by Ronald John Hy Public Health Emergencies by Caffilene Allen Civil Defense by Loran B. Smith The Utility of All-Hazard Programs by William L. Waugh, Jr., and Ronald John Hy Selected Bibliography Emergency Management Organizations and Information Sources Index
During the 1980s many Americans participated directly and indirectly in the drama and tragedy of major catastrophes, from volcanic eruptions to air crashes. Organized by disaster-type, this handbook inventories and examines the way we address major natural and man-made hazards and assesses the effectiveness these efforts in four areas: mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery.
WILLIAM L. WAUGH, JR., is Associate Professor of Public Administration and Political Science at Georgia State University. He is the author of International Terrorism: How Nations Respond to Terrorists, Terrorism and Emergency Management, and is the coeditor of Cities and Disaster: North American Studies in Emergency Management, and Antiterrorism Policies(forthcoming). In addition, he is the editor of Emergency Management Dispatch. RONALD JOHN HY is Director of the Division of Governmental Studies and Professor of Public Administration at the Universtiy of Arkansas at Little Rock. He is the author of Financial Management for Health Care Administrators (Quorum Books, 1989) and the coauthor of Research Methods and Statistics. He has also written numerous articles, reports, and chapters in books.
?Waugh and Hy's handbook examines how Americans have addressed
recent major hazards and assesses the effectiveness of these
efforts. It evaluates individual disaster types (floods, tornadoes,
hazardous materials spills, etc.) in terms of their frequency of
occurrence, potential for property loss and human casualties,
predictability of events, and the history of such disasters in the
U.S. In addition, the volume outlines the development of emergency
management efforts by federal, state, and local governments to cope
with these hazards; the major problems in designing policy to
respond to specific risks as well as some of the major policy
alternatives. Following the analyses of specific hazards, the book
considers the utility of all-hazards programs, such as FEMA's
Integrated Emergency Management System, and documents the status of
present emergency efforts by federal, state, and local
governments.?-Natural Hazards Observer
"Waugh and Hy's handbook examines how Americans have addressed
recent major hazards and assesses the effectiveness of these
efforts. It evaluates individual disaster types (floods, tornadoes,
hazardous materials spills, etc.) in terms of their frequency of
occurrence, potential for property loss and human casualties,
predictability of events, and the history of such disasters in the
U.S. In addition, the volume outlines the development of emergency
management efforts by federal, state, and local governments to cope
with these hazards; the major problems in designing policy to
respond to specific risks as well as some of the major policy
alternatives. Following the analyses of specific hazards, the book
considers the utility of all-hazards programs, such as FEMA's
Integrated Emergency Management System, and documents the status of
present emergency efforts by federal, state, and local
governments."-Natural Hazards Observer
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