Description

Book Synopsis

Reviewing current policies and practices, the book assesses the financial, economic and physical risk of building in hazardous areas, and looks at how societies approach economic development while trying to create a more resilient built environment in spite of the dangers. It examines the vulnerability of economic and social infrastructure to natural hazard events, looks at policies which imperil infrastructure, and proposes new development approaches to be undertaken by sovereign states, international development banks, NGOs, and bilateral aid agencies.



Trade Review

“…a careful reading is rewarded by lessons learned and to be learned in the emerging field of disaster risk management. Helpful anecdotes are inserted throughout, balancing critical assessments.” • Recovery Diva

“The expertise and experience of the author stands out throughout this book, particularly in its focus on the built environment and disaster… Hopefully, the book will encourage new thinking among all those whose first pivot in planning and development, whether before or after a sudden-onset disaster, is to build more, bigger, and faster.” • Jane Henrici, Consulting Senior Researcher and Gender Advisor, World Bank-Haiti and Lecturer, George Washington University



Table of Contents

Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviatons
Timelines

Introduction

Part I: We Got Here For a Reason

Chapter 1. Linkage between Disaster and Development
Chapter 2. Deliberate Actions and Debilitating Outcomes—Gaps Appear
Chapter 3. What Development Has Brought and Disaster Wrought
Chapter 4. Understanding Where the Disaster-Development Link Leads
Chapter 5. Disaster-Development Linkage through the Lens of Disaster Recovery
Chapter 6. Continuity in the Name of Constituents

Part II: Once and Future Disaster Risk Reduction

Chapter 7. Redefining DRR in Development of the Built Environment
Chapter 8. Making Risk Information Visible
Chapter 9. Risk within Present and Emerging Economic Development Forces

Part III: DRR Will Be What It Is Conceived to Be

Chapter 10. Sustaining Nature of Disaster-Development Linkage
Chapter 11. Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction in Development

Part IV: They Who Call the Tune

Chapter 12. Built Environment Vulnerability and Development Processes
Chapter 13. Monitoring, Evaluation, Reporting, Regulation and Enforcement
Chapter 14. Policy Guidance on DRR Taken to Development
Chapter 15. What Has Been Found about the Future: Changes that Change Positions

Conclusion

References
Index

Constructing Risk: Disaster, Development, and the

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    £89.10

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    RRP £99.00 – you save £9.90 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Stephen O. Bender

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      View other formats and editions of Constructing Risk: Disaster, Development, and the by Stephen O. Bender

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 13/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800731622, 978-1800731622
      ISBN10: 1800731620

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Reviewing current policies and practices, the book assesses the financial, economic and physical risk of building in hazardous areas, and looks at how societies approach economic development while trying to create a more resilient built environment in spite of the dangers. It examines the vulnerability of economic and social infrastructure to natural hazard events, looks at policies which imperil infrastructure, and proposes new development approaches to be undertaken by sovereign states, international development banks, NGOs, and bilateral aid agencies.



      Trade Review

      “…a careful reading is rewarded by lessons learned and to be learned in the emerging field of disaster risk management. Helpful anecdotes are inserted throughout, balancing critical assessments.” • Recovery Diva

      “The expertise and experience of the author stands out throughout this book, particularly in its focus on the built environment and disaster… Hopefully, the book will encourage new thinking among all those whose first pivot in planning and development, whether before or after a sudden-onset disaster, is to build more, bigger, and faster.” • Jane Henrici, Consulting Senior Researcher and Gender Advisor, World Bank-Haiti and Lecturer, George Washington University



      Table of Contents

      Foreword
      Acknowledgements
      List of Abbreviatons
      Timelines

      Introduction

      Part I: We Got Here For a Reason

      Chapter 1. Linkage between Disaster and Development
      Chapter 2. Deliberate Actions and Debilitating Outcomes—Gaps Appear
      Chapter 3. What Development Has Brought and Disaster Wrought
      Chapter 4. Understanding Where the Disaster-Development Link Leads
      Chapter 5. Disaster-Development Linkage through the Lens of Disaster Recovery
      Chapter 6. Continuity in the Name of Constituents

      Part II: Once and Future Disaster Risk Reduction

      Chapter 7. Redefining DRR in Development of the Built Environment
      Chapter 8. Making Risk Information Visible
      Chapter 9. Risk within Present and Emerging Economic Development Forces

      Part III: DRR Will Be What It Is Conceived to Be

      Chapter 10. Sustaining Nature of Disaster-Development Linkage
      Chapter 11. Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction in Development

      Part IV: They Who Call the Tune

      Chapter 12. Built Environment Vulnerability and Development Processes
      Chapter 13. Monitoring, Evaluation, Reporting, Regulation and Enforcement
      Chapter 14. Policy Guidance on DRR Taken to Development
      Chapter 15. What Has Been Found about the Future: Changes that Change Positions

      Conclusion

      References
      Index

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