Managing Disaster Risk in Emerging Economies

This book presents papers on several events organized by the World Bank's Disaster Management Fund (DMF). The DMF's objectives are to help the Bank provide a more strategic and rapid response to disaster emergencies and to integrate disaster prevention and mitigation measures in all Bank activities. Part I of this book on risk identification contains chapters on the economic impacts on natural disasters in developing countries, including flooding, with the example of Buenos Aires; and time scales of climate and disaster. Part II explores aspects of reducing disaster risk, such as the relationship of infrastructure, natural disasters, and poverty; flooding issues in the United States, incentives for risk management and mitigation concerning cultural heritage; issues related to single-family housing, women, and children; and climate change from a development perspective. Part III looks at strategies for developing countries to more effectively share and transfer disaster risk from the angles of risk and insurance by the poor in developing countries; financing disaster mitigation for the poor; moral dimensions of risk transfer and reduction strategies; incentives for mitigation investment and risk management to encourage public-private partnerships; and linking catastrophe insurance and mitigating disaster losses.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kreimer, Alcira, Arnold, Margaret
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2000-06
Subjects:ALLIANCES, BUILDING CODES, CATASTROPHES, CATASTROPHIC LOSSES, CHANGE, CLIMATE, CLIMATE CHANGE, COMMON GOOD, DISASTER ASSISTANCE, DISASTER EMERGENCIES, DISASTER MANAGEMENT, DISASTER MANAGEMENT FACILITY, DISASTER MITIGATION, DISASTER MITIGATION MEASURES, DISASTER PREVENTION, DISASTER RECONSTRUCTION, DISASTER REDUCTION, DISASTER RELIEF, DMF, DROUGHTS, EARTHQUAKE RECONSTRUCTION, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMICS, EDUCATION, EFFECTIVE STRATEGY, EMERGENCIES, EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT, EMERGENCY RECOVERY, EMPLOYMENT, EPIDEMIOLOGY, EQUILIBRIUM, FATALITIES, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FIRE PREVENTION, FLOOD CONTROL, FLOOD INSURANCE, FLOOD PROTECTION, FLOODING, FLOODS, FOREST FIRES, HEALTH, HEALTH CARE, HOUSING, HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE, IMPORTS, INFLATION, INFORMED DECISIONS, INSURANCE, INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, LAND USE, LANDSLIDES, MARKET INCENTIVES, MARKET INCENTIVES FOR MITIGATION INVESTMENT, MIMI, NATURAL DISASTERS, PRIVATE INSURANCE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCERS, PROGRAMS, RATES, RECLAMATION, REDUCING POVERTY, REINSURANCE, RISK ASSESSMENT, RISK MANAGEMENT, RISK MITIGATION, RISK REDUCTION, RISK SHARING, RISK TRANSFER, SAFETY, SAVINGS, SOCIAL CAPITAL, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, SOCIAL NETWORKS, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, VICTIMS, WASTE, WORKERS, WORLD BANK DISASTER ASSISTANCE DISASTER RECOVERY, TRANSITIONAL ECONOMIES, NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS, ECONOMIC IMPACT, CLIMATIC CHANGE, POVERTY, CULTURAL HERITAGE, PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS, STATUS OF WOMEN, CHILDREN IN POVERTY, VULNERABILITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/06/436935/managing-disaster-risk-emerging-economies
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15196
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