Abstract:Capacity for managing and preventing disasters depends upon how disasters are defi ned or understood. Until the nineteenth century, the capacity to manage disasters was limited to the ability to undertake relief and rescue operations. Beginning in the early 1900s, social scientists laid a foundation for understanding disasters as the product of natural and social forces. Based on this understanding, the capacity to manage "disaster risk" required the ability to develop good models of disaster risk, planning to… Show more
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