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International and Local Actors Disaster Response: Responding to the Beirut Explosion
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Barnes and Noble
International and Local Actors Disaster Response: Responding to the Beirut Explosion
Current price: $66.99
Barnes and Noble
International and Local Actors Disaster Response: Responding to the Beirut Explosion
Current price: $66.99
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Size: Hardcover
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International and Local Actors in Disaster Response
uses the Beirut explosion in August 2020 to explore disaster prevention and response in developing states.
Disasters, whether man-made or natural, have always tested governments and their bureaucracies. Despite numerous research efforts, existing empirical literature does not provide conclusive evidence on how multiple aspects of social infrastructure can simultaneously affect disaster preparedness and recovery, and what role the international community can have. This book analyzes the role of international and local organizations in responding to the disaster in Beirut and assesses the interorganizational collaboration between the public and private sectors following the explosion. The author develops a conceptual framework of government/non-profit relations in post-disaster management and examines the long-term disaster response and intervention of both international and local communities in a developing world context.
This book will be of interest to students, scholars, and researchers of disaster management and response, public administration, international relations, and the non-profit sector.
uses the Beirut explosion in August 2020 to explore disaster prevention and response in developing states.
Disasters, whether man-made or natural, have always tested governments and their bureaucracies. Despite numerous research efforts, existing empirical literature does not provide conclusive evidence on how multiple aspects of social infrastructure can simultaneously affect disaster preparedness and recovery, and what role the international community can have. This book analyzes the role of international and local organizations in responding to the disaster in Beirut and assesses the interorganizational collaboration between the public and private sectors following the explosion. The author develops a conceptual framework of government/non-profit relations in post-disaster management and examines the long-term disaster response and intervention of both international and local communities in a developing world context.
This book will be of interest to students, scholars, and researchers of disaster management and response, public administration, international relations, and the non-profit sector.