Mainstream quantitative analysis and simulations are fraught
with difficulties and are intrinsically unable to deal
appropriately with long-term macroeconomic effects of disasters. In
this new book, J.M. Albala-Bertrand develops the themes introduced
in his past book, "The Political Economy of Large Natural
Disasters" (Clarendon Press, 1993), to show that societal
networking and disaster localization constitute part of an
essential framework to understand disaster effects and
responses.
The author s last book argued that disasters were a problem "of
"development, rather than a problem "for" development. This volume
takes the argument forward both in terms of the macroeconomic
effects of disaster and development policy, arguing that economy
and society are not inert objects, but living organisms. Using a
framework based on societal networking and the economic
localization of disasters, the author shows that societal
functionality (defined as the capacity of a system to survive,
reproduce and develop) is unlikely to be impaired by natural
disasters.
This book will be of interest to scholars and practitioners
involved in disaster analysis and response policy, and will also be
relevant to students of development economics.
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