Emergency Management
A Reference Handbook
by Jeffrey B. Bumgarner
January 2008, 293pp, 6x9
1 volume, ABC-CLIO

Hardcover: 978-1-59884-110-7
$65, £50, 57€, A90
eBook Available: 978-1-59884-111-4
Please contact your preferred eBook vendor for pricing.

A hurricane floods a major American city, leaving 1,800 people dead and thousands homeless. A tsunami in Indonesia kills 200,000 people in minutes. A sarin attack in the Japanese subway poisons 12 people and sends thousands more to the hospital. These are the life-and-death scenarios that the discipline of emergency management tackles—with logistics, computer modeling, and ingenuity.

This work is the first nontechnical guide to the principles, practices, policies, and profession of emergency management.

The monumental natural and humanmade disasters of the 20th century, which killed 25 million people in Asia alone, have underscored the need for professional and coordinated disaster response worldwide. This book examines the profession and practice of emergency management in the United States, at the United Nations, and around the globe.

Emergency Management explores the history and development of the discipline from the first federal disaster relief proclamation in 1803 to the present day. It also analyzes current debates over when and how emergency resources are best utilized, and the laws and public policies that govern emergencies. An essential source for secondary and college students, and for all citizens who want to understand emergency preparedness.

Features

  • Numerous primary source documents include key legislation as well as FEMA policies and publications
  • A chronology lists major disasters in the United States along with key emergency management developments
Jeffrey B. Bumgarner, PhD, is associate professor of criminal justice at Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX. His published works include Federal Agents: The Growth of Federal Law Enforcement in America and ABC-CLIO's Profiling and Criminal Justice in America.

Reviews

"The section on background issues is insightful and the pages devoted to the broader concept of emergency management establish perspective for the rest of the book. . . . [T]he book should find a home in school and public libraries."—ARBA, March 1, 2009

Contemporary World Issues

This award-winning series offers comprehensive, one-volume reference handbooks on important topics related to health, education, the environment, and social and ethical issues.

24-hour cable news. Millions of internet sites. Information overload. How can we sort through the information? Assess the analyses? Trust the sources?

A world of questions demands a library of answers. Contemporary World Issues covers the controversial topics that students, readers, and citizens want to read about, write about, and know more about.

Features

Subject coverage spans six main categories:

  • Criminal Justice
  • Environment
  • Gender and Ethnicity
  • Politics, Law, and Government
  • Science, Technology, and Medicine
  • Society
Each volume offers a rich array of resources:
  • A background and history essay that provides essential context and grounding for further study
  • A balanced summary of ongoing controversies and proposed solutions that show numerous paths for further research on pressing, contemporary questions
  • A forum of authoritative perspective essays by experts, offering a broad spectrum of arguments on the issues
  • Carefully selected annotated documents, tables, and graphs that support statistical literacy and investigation of primary sources
  • A chronology of events, legislation, and movements that place events in sequence and draw connections between them
  • Annotated lists of print, web, and multimedia resources that power the next steps for in-depth research
  • Profiles of key players and organizations
  • A glossary of key terms
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