Crucibles of Hazard: Mega-Cities and Disasters in Transition FROM THE PUBLISHER
This collaborative study of environmental risks in ten of the world's major cities was led by the International Geographical Union's Study Group on the Disaster Vulnerability of Mega-cities. Geographers, planners, and other experts examine the hazard experiences of case study cities and analyse their future risks. The authors conclude that the natural disaster potential of the biggest cities is expanding at a pace which far exceeds the rate of urbanization.
New amalgams of hazard are being created in metropolitan areas with overlapping natural, technological, biological, and social risks, exposing more people and places to environmental hazards. Safety gaps are widening among differentially vulnerable populations and neighbourhoods at risk. Public policies and hazard response measures are increasingly being tested beyond their capacities, with franc consequences.
In addition to tracing hazard trends and arguing in support of management reforms that can be implemented quickly, Crucibles of Hazard directs attention to long-term issues of safety and security that must be resolved to sustain urban areas. Opportunities for such innovative policymaking include: capitalizing on the role of hazards as agents of urban diversification: broadening the scope for employing hazard-based contingency planning models in other urban governance contexts; and mobilizing hazard myths and metaphors as unifying sources of inspiration for diverse and sometimes fractious metropolitan constituencies.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
Geographers, planners, and other specialists examine the earthquake hazard experience of some major world cities and analyze their future risk. Besides the cities well known for the habit, the case studies include Dhaka, Sydney, London, Lima, and Miami after hurricane Andrew. They find that the potential for disaster is increasing far faster than the rate of urbanization, and envision overlapping natural, technological, biological, and social risks. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)