Research - 3rd Cycle - Disasters
Lead centre: LIRNEasia - Contact: Ayesha Zainudeen

Hazards arise in the physical world. The hazard, if it is witnessed by human beings is warning in itself; the advice that is given to the citizens of Hawai'i about local tsunamis that may be created by proximate earthquakes exemplifies this: "your feet are your signal; if you feel an earthquake, head for high ground." If the hazard goes unnoticed by humans and the detection devices employed by humans, like an underwater landslide for instance, the hazard could not only become a disaster, but it would go undetected by the human world. The aim of disaster warning is to prevent a hazard from becoming a disaster. In order to accomplish this, accurate and credible warning must be communicated to the vulnerable population as rapidly as possible, as far in advance of the physical effects as possible. That is, the physical occurrence must be represented in the symbolic world as soon as possible.

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Date Item Title Author Hits
Monday, 23 January 2006 Dam-related Hazard Warning System Rohan Samarajiva et al 5292
Saturday, 17 December 2005 Mobilizing information and communications technologies for effective disaster warning Rohan Samarajiva 5416
Friday, 01 July 2005 Draft report: Actions Required to Avoid and Mitigate Dam Disasters Ayesha Zainudeen 5713
Tuesday, 15 March 2005 National Early Warning System: Sri Lanka Rohan Samarajiva et al 5849
Friday, 21 January 2005 Special Dossier: Emergency Communication Javier López 4397
Tuesday, 18 January 2005 Regulatory Design for Disaster Preparedness and Recovery: The Missing Link Aad Correljé 6229
 
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