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Long-Term Recovery from Disasters – The Forgotten Component of Emergency Management

Long-Term Recovery from Disasters – The Forgotten Component of Emergency Management. by Claire B. Rubin Claire B. Rubin & Associates Arlington, VA www.clairerubin.com. Long-Term Recovery Neglected Element of Emergency Management . Observations

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Long-Term Recovery from Disasters – The Forgotten Component of Emergency Management

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  1. Long-Term Recovery from Disasters – The Forgotten Component of Emergency Management by Claire B. RubinClaire B. Rubin & AssociatesArlington, VA www.clairerubin.com

  2. Long-Term Recovery Neglected Element of Emergency Management Observations The amount and quality of research on recovery is not adequate for our present needs There are very serious deficiencies in basic and applied research on the topic The progression of research and knowledge about long-term recovery has moved in fits and starts Lack of consistent progress in improving the knowledge base contributes directly to the very serious lack of knowledge acquisition, utilization, and institutionalization in professional practice

  3. LTR was the New Frontier in the 1980s Three Main Books on LTR Friesma, H. Paul et al. (1979). Aftermath; Communities after Natural Disaster. Sage Publications Ltd. Rossi, Peter et al. (1979). After the Clean-Up: Long-Range Effects of Natural Disasters. Sage Publications.   Haas, J. Eugene et al.(1977). Reconstruction Following Disaster. MIT Press

  4. LTR was the New Frontier in the 1980s Published Field Studies Claire B. Rubin, Martin D. Saperstein, and Daniel G. Barbee (1985) Community Recovery from a Major Natural Disaster. Monograph # 41. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado/NHRAIC. Rubin, Claire B. (1985). The Community Recovery Process in the United States after a Major Natural Disaster in International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters

  5. The main product or outcome of the research was a simple chart depicting three not-so-simple components of efficient and effective recovery Personal Leadership Abilityto Act Knowledge of What to Do

  6. Figure 1

  7. Subsequent Work Yezer, Anthony M. and Rubin, Claire B. The Local Economic Effects of Natural Disasters. Working Paper #61. NHRAIC. (75 pp.) Rubin, Claire B. and Roy Popkin (1991). Disaster Recovery from Hurricane Hugo in South Carolina. NHRAIC Univ. of Colorado. Working Paper # 69.  Disaster Recovery Matrix (1993). [The graphic was revised, scanned, and posted online by some Minnesota State officials in 1997.] Rubin, Claire B. ( 1996) Recovery: It’s Not Getting Any Easier. NHRAIC Quick Response Report #89

  8. Motivator By Gavin P. Smith and Dennis Wenger (2006), Chapter 14: “Sustainable Disaster Recovery: Operationalizing an Existing Agenda” edited by Havidan Rodriguez et al. Springer Publisher Response http://www.DisasterRecoveryResources.net Author: Claire B. RubinSponsor: The Public Entity Risk Institute

  9. Some Observations Knowledge Base State of the Practice of Long Term Recovery Problems with How we Fund (or Fail to Fund) LTR research Final Thoughts

  10. One positive note Chris Bellavita on “Tame Problems” vs. “Wicked Problems,” essentially a discussion of linear decision makings vs. more complex forms of decision making. See: http://www.hlswatch.com/index.php?s=%22wicked+problems%22 Edward Weber and Anne Khademian. Wicked Problems, Knowledge Challenges, and Collaborative Capacity Builders in Network Settings in PAR, March/April 2008. Robert Ward and Gary Wamsley (2007), Chapter 8: From a Painful Paste to an Uncertain Future in Claire B. Rubin (Ed.) Emergency Management, the American Experience, 1900-2005. PERI.

  11. Parting Thought: Think Big, but support small projects and maverick project leaders because they may just have a lot to offer

  12. Claire B. Rubin and Daniel G. Barbee. Disaster Recovery and Hazard Mitigation, Bridging the Intergovernmental Gap. (1985) Public Administration Review. Vol. 45, Special Issue, January 1985. (pp. 57-63)Figure 2, which was part of the article noted above, actually preceded the final development of Figure 1 one shown above, and is important because it notes the tradeoffs necessary between mitigation actions and efficient recovery Figure: STRATEGIC CHOICES FOR GUIDING LOCAL RECOVERY

  13. Figure 6

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