Development in Disaster-prone Places

By James Lewis
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Development in Disaster-prone Places is another must-read in terms of how to understand vulnerability and disasters. The book focuses on the political and social processes which lead to disasters – the long-term processes.

Experts who have recommended this book

In an interview on Disaster Diplomacy

Interview Extract:

Next book: Development in Disaster-prone Places.

Development in Disaster-prone Places is another must-read in terms of how to understand vulnerability and disasters. The book focuses on the political and social processes which lead to disasters – the long-term processes. The author gives the theory and looks at a lot of case studies around the world of these failures in practice and how to improve. People and governments don’t tend to think in the long term and think about disasters in isolation, rather than tackling how vulnerability can be reduced to avoid disaster.

This approach is important for disaster diplomacy theoretically and practically. Theoretically, in terms of laying a foundation that helps to understand why disaster diplomacy tends not to work, despite many who want it to work and actively try to make it work. Practically, in terms of the book introducing several important disaster diplomacy case studies, including Samoa, Nicaragua and Bangladesh.

Read full interview

About Ilan Kelman

Ilan Kelman is a Senior Research Fellow at the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research–Oslo (CICERO). His research interests include vulnerability, risk, islands, and disasters and developing practical solutions to the problems that arise in these areas. He is the co-founder and co-director of Risk RED, a non-profit organisation established to make disaster-prevention education more effective, and is co-founder of research projects www.disasterdiplomacy.org and www.islandvulnerability.org.