Post-Disaster Reconstruction of the Built Environment :Rebuilding for Resilience

Publication subTitle :Rebuilding for Resilience

Author: Dilanthi Amaratunga  

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc‎

Publication year: 2011

E-ISBN: 9781444344912

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9781444333565

Subject: TU746.3 building maintenance, alteration, renovation

Language: ENG

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Description

Disasters threaten all parts of the world and they appear to be increasing in frequency, scale and intensity. Despite huge improvements in the emergency response, permanent reconstruction is often uncoordinated, inefficiently managed and slow to begin. International agencies are geared to an efficient response in terms of humanitarian relief, but they are not well versed in the requirements of long-term reconstruction, which is often constrained by lack of planning and poorly coordinated management.

The construction industry is typically engaged in a range of critical activities after a disaster, including provision of temporary shelter in the immediate aftermath and restoration of permanent shelter and public infrastructure once the immediate humanitarian needs have been attended to. Post-Disaster Reconstruction of the Built Environment identifies the challenges that face the industry and highlights best practice to enable the construction industry to address those problems which make an effective response to these unexpected events difficult. Written by an international team of experts, this book will help researchers and advanced students of construction understand the problems faced by communities and the construction industry when faced with a natural or man-made disaster, and identify the planning and management processes required by the industry to mount an effective response.

Chapter

Contents

pp.:  1 – 7

About the Editors

pp.:  7 – 12

List of Contributors

pp.:  12 – 14

Foreword

pp.:  14 – 20

Acknowledgements

pp.:  20 – 21

1 Introduction

pp.:  21 – 23

3 Capacity of the Construction Industry for Post-Disaster Reconstruction: Post-Tsunami Sri Lanka

pp.:  35 – 52

4 Resourcing for Post-Disaster Reconstruction: A Longitudinal Case Study Following the 2008 Earthquake in China

pp.:  52 – 73

5 Empowerment in Disaster Response and Reconstruction: Role ofWomen

pp.:  73 – 92

6 Community-Based Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction: Examples from Indonesia

pp.:  92 – 113

7 Stakeholder Consultation in the Reconstruction Process

pp.:  113 – 139

8 Project Management of Disaster Reconstruction

pp.:  139 – 155

9 Legislation for Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction: Cases fromNew Zealand

pp.:  155 – 173

10 Conflict, Post Conflict and Post-Conflict Reconstruction: Exploring the Associated Challenges

pp.:  173 – 197

11 Private Construction Sector Engagement in Post-Disaster Reconstruction

pp.:  197 – 214

12 KnowledgeManagement Practices and Systems Integration

pp.:  214 – 230

13 Restoration of Major Infrastructure and Rehabilitation of Communities

pp.:  230 – 258

14 Sustainable Post-DisasterWasteManagement: Construction and Demolition Debris

pp.:  258 – 273

15 Linking Reconstruction to Sustainable Socio-Economic Development

pp.:  273 – 290

16 Disaster Risk Reduction and its Relationship with Sustainable Development

pp.:  290 – 309

17 Conclusion

pp.:  309 – 326

Index

pp.:  326 – 329

LastPages

pp.:  329 – 337

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