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Promoting Seismic Safety - Guidance for Advocates (FEMA 474 / September 2005) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R395
Discovery Miles 3 950
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Promoting Seismic Safety - Guidance for Advocates (FEMA 474 / September 2005) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R395
Discovery Miles 3 950
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Earthquakes damage structures - buildings, roads and bridges,
utility and communications systems - and those damaged structures
kill and injure people and cost a great deal to fix. And while the
structures are not functioning, the businesses that rely on them
either fail or face great financial hardship. Seismic safety
advocates attempt to reduce all earthquake losses in various ways.
Structures can be strengthened to resist shaking, either when they
are built or later in their lives, or they can be sited in areas
less subject to violent shaking. But increasing seismic safety
requires knowledge of the earthquake hazard in a community or area,
an understanding of how to reduce structural damages, and a
willingness to spend the money and time necessary to do so.
Decisions to invest in seismic safety are made by individuals,
private and public sector organizations, and governments, so the
goal of seismic safety is served by risk education, community
activism, and political activism. Promoting seismic safety can be
challenging because people seem indifferent to its benefits or
decision-makers dismiss good ideas about ways to make buildings and
communities more resistant to the damaging effects of earthquakes.
Advocates work hard and care deeply, yet often feel that their
efforts are ignored. Given these frustrations, advocates sometimes
give up, or wait for another day. This resource kit is meant to
inspire all advocates to keep working toward their goal. The briefs
assembled here distill what we have learned-through research and
experience over the last 40 years-about promoting seismic safety in
the United States. Advocates can be almost anyone: people whose
jobs involve public safety; design professional who want to make a
difference; those who work in organizations with missions to
increase seismic safety; and citizen-activists who have a personal
stake in earthquake safety. Many potential advocates do not think
of themselves as such because they are not trying to change seismic
safety policy. But seismic safety can be increased at levels as
various as design and building professional practices, planning
commission and special district procedures, and implementation of
public safety programs. Across the U.S., advocates have improved
seismic safety in areas with moderate to very high degrees of
seismic risk by arguing for reduction of future losses in damaging
earthquakes, and by calling attention to the economic and social
vulnerability of their community to the losses an earthquake could
inflict. Especially important to consider are buildings that are
built to out-of-date and inferior codes, where people nonetheless
live and work. Successful advocates point out another rationale for
seismic safety - more earthquake resilience in highways, power and
utility systems, buildings, and communities means increased
resilience to other types of damaging events, both natural and
human-caused. Talking about seismic issues often has the benefit of
raising questions about the condition of facilities or the
readiness to respond to any extreme event.
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