Disaster Prevention and Management: Volume 13 Issue 4
Strapline:
An International JournalTable of contents
Disasters and economic damage: macro, meso and micro approaches
Anne van der VeenTsunamis, droughts, earthquakes, hurricanes and floods are a constant threat to society. Where in the past the population at risk had to react on the consequences of disasters, at…
Performance and protection in an adaptive transaction model
Sam ColeExplores possibilities for simulating the effects of continuous disruptions to an economy using a multi‐sector social accounting model. The underlying thesis for the model is that…
Economic loss: myth and measurement
Hal CochraneThis paper covers a number of pitfalls that could hinder the development of a common methodology for estimating flood damage. Such pitfalls include double counting, ignoring…
Modeling spatial economic impacts of an earthquake: input‐output approaches
Yasuhide OkuyamaEconomic modeling issues for measuring damages and losses from disasters and their impacts are complex. The questions surrounding the potential economic effects of a disaster have…
Defining and measuring economic resilience to disasters
Adam RoseThree difficulties confront researchers in the resilience arena. At the conceptual level, there is the need to identify resilient actions, including those that may seem to violate…
The indirect economic effects of a terrorist attack on transport infrastructure: a proposal for a SAGE
Mark ThissenAfter the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York on 11 September 2001 there is an increased fear of terrorism. The transport sector seems to be a main target for…
The evaluation of vulnerability to flooding
Colin GreenFrom a systems perspective, vulnerability can be defined as the relationship between a purposive system and its environment, where that environment varies over time. Which…
On direct estimation of initial damage in the case of a major catastrophe: derivation of the “basic equation”
Marija Bočkarjova, Albert E. Steenge, Anne van der VeenInput‐output analysis (I‐O) is increasingly used in studies of sudden catastrophes such as earthquakes, hurricanes, or, in the case of The Netherlands, major flooding…
A methodology for incorporating natural catastrophes into macroeconomic projections
Paul Freeman, Leslie Martin, Reinhard Mechler, Koko WarnerThis paper addresses a critical problem in macroeconomic planning for natural disaster losses: how to incorporate potential future losses into current planning activity. The…
ISSN:
0965-3562e-ISSN:
1758-6100ISSN-L:
0965-3562Online date, start – end:
1992Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditors:
- Dr JC Gaillard
- Dr Emmanuel Raju