Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDylon Quintrell Modified over 10 years ago
1
Comparative Emergency Management Damon Coppola June 10, 2010
2
International Disaster Management Systems / Structures
3
International Disaster Management Systems / Structures Scenarios
4
2007 EMI Conference International Disaster Management not featured on the EMI agenda for the first time in 3 years Conference Paper: “The Importance of International Disaster Management Studies in the Field of Emergency Management”
5
Five Arguments 1.The United States’ emergency management system is imperfect 2.The United States is moving towards a ‘Third World’ system 3.Climate change equals bigger, stronger, and more numerous disasters 4.Climate change means global instability 5.The expanding discipline demands the inclusion of international disaster management studies
6
Course Concept Present the fundamentals of the emergency discipline as they exist in other countries of the world, and on a global scale Expand upon domestic lessons Examining the same topics seen in other emergency management courses through the perspective of the greater international emergency management community Explore hazard, risk, vulnerability, and disaster trends, as they differ throughout the world Consider the international EM participants and players
7
Development Timeline 2-Year Development Project October 2008: Project Began November 2008: 2-year work plan submitted December 2008: Focus group June 2009: Update – sessions 1-8 completed June 2010: Sessions 1-25 completed August 2010: Complete course submitted September / October 2010: Final review
8
Dr. McEntyre Effort Online textbook of Comparative Case Studies Began Fall 2008 18 national case studies (including the US) In depth look at national capacity Complementary efforts
9
Course Structure Standard EMI Higher-Ed Course Format Individual 1-, 2-, or 3-hour sessions Session length – 10-15 pages per course hour Sections include: –Session Header –Objectives –Scope –Readings –Requirements –Remarks –Supplemental Considerations –Course Development References
10
Course Outline Introduction and importance (1/2) Global historical context of EM (3) International efforts to improve EM (4) Disasters and development (5) International disaster trends (6) Hazards and hazard identification (7/8) Risk, Vulnerability, and Risk Perception (9/10/11)
11
Course Outline The EM Cycle (12) Mitigation (13-17) Preparedness / Public Education (18/19) Response (20/21) Recovery (22/23) Mid-term exam (24)
12
Course Outline Governmental EM Agencies/Structures (25) NGOs (26) Multilateral Organizations (27) The IFIs (28) Final exam (29)
13
Course Development Update Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.