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11TH ANNUAL FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT HIGHER EDUCATION CONFERENCE

JUNE 2-5, 2008

NEW EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND RELATED BOOKS AND MATERIALS

(2nd Breakout Session of Thursday, June 5, 2008)

Moderator

None

Panel

Dean R. Larson, PhD., CEM

Visiting Assistant Professor

Purdue University Calumet, Hammond, IN

David A. McIntire, PhD.

Associate Professor, Emergency Administration and Planning

University of North Texas, Denton, TX

Rick Sylves, PhD.

Professor

Department of Political Science, University of Delaware, Newark, DE

William L. Waugh, Jr., PhD

Professor

Public Administration, Urban Studies, and Political Science, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA

Carol Cwiak, J.D.

Faculty/Internship Coordinator

North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND

NEW EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND RELATED BOOKS AND MATERIALS

Prepared by:

Steven Zurlo

Master of Science student in Disaster Medicine and Management

Philadelphia University: Philadelphia, PA

This breakout session included several new texts that are available for use by both educators and disaster response and recovery students and providers. The panel discussed the importance of understanding the new materials that are available in order to teach and develop appropriate curriculums and protocol for preparing our nation and its responders to emergency and disaster situations. Each author briefly described their book and the relevant information contained within.

Implementing NFPA 1600: National Preparedness Standard by Dr. Dean R. Larson

This is a new handbook with an accompanying CD-ROM for forms. It is based on the 2007 edition of NFPA 1600. Current work on the 2010 version is to make it more user friendly.

Management guidelines- moving from what program should look like to include how to do it. The Prologue discusses the Editor, Authors, and Contributors. It has many revisions that include the following chapters:

Chapter 2: Program Development

Chapter 3: Risk Assessment

Chapter 4: Prevention and Mitigation

Chapter 5: Resource Management

Chapter 6 & 9: Emergency Operations

Chapter 7: Business Continuity

Chapter 8: Crisis Communications

Chapter 10: Managing the Incident

Chapter 11: Training, Drills, and Exercises

Chapter 12: Program Evaluation

Additional: more than 2 dozen forms on CD

Available from NFPA:

www.nfpa.org

1-800-344-3555 (USA)

1-617-770-3000 (outside USA)

$72.75

10% discount for NFPA members

Introduction to Homeland Security: Understanding Terrorism with an Emergency Management Perspective by Dr. David A. McIntire

Through Terrorism and Emergency Management courses offered prior to 9/11 by the author, he felt current literature dealt with terror and terrorism actors and military response- but that reality was not recognized. The terrorism threat is not fully comprehended

This book is written for students, scholars, and practitioners and has integrated research from many disciplines. Chapters include:

Chapter 1: Impact of 9/11

Threat of terrorism

Mature of homeland security

Role of emergency management

Chapter 2: Definitions of terrorism

Chapter 3: Historical causes of terrorism

Us foreign policy

Poverty

Politics, political systems and political structures

Chapter 4: Terrorists and terrorist organizations

Classification of terrorist

Chapter 5: Appearance of terrorism

Evolution of terrorism

Chapter 6: Terrorists’ use of media

Media’s interest in terrorism

Gov involvement in public information

Chapter 7: War, terrorism, and law

Security and liberty

Cases and concerns

Chapter 8: Root causes

Policy and legislation

Intelligence

Counter-terrorism

Border control

Chapter 9: Assessing threats

Building design and construction

Zoning and setback requirements

Chapter 10: Importance of preparedness

Chapter 11: Safety and security

Search and rescue, medical care, triage

Chapter 12: Assessing damages

Chapter 13: The future of terrorism

Radiological weapons

Nuclear

Biological

Chemical

Accountability in homeland security

Final thoughts

Terrorist attacks are both similar to and different than other disasters. This book should help to highlight these concepts in order to better prepare our military, emergency responders, and citizens.

Available at: http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-047012752X.html

Disaster Policy and Politics by Dr. Rick Sylves

This book is designed for masters’ level and upper division undergraduate students and the work is a political science oriented treatment of the field of emergency management and disaster policy. This is a needed vehicle for faculty designing emergency management education programs. It seeks to empower more professors to teach disaster policy and emergency management. This work will help build political science academic legitimacy for the field and study of emergency management and disaster policy. Chapters included:

Chapter 1: Disaster management in the United States

Chapter 2: Disaster management and theories of public management

Chapter 3: Historical trends in disaster man

Chapter 4: Understanding disaster policy through presidential disaster declarations

Chapter 5: The role of scientists and engineers

Chapter 6: Intergovernmental relations in disaster policy

Chapter 7: Civil-military relations and national security

Chapter 8: Globalization of disasters

Chapter 9: Conclusions and the future

Additional: Discussion questions for each chapter to be sent free of charge by visiting course support website.

www.peripresdecusa.org showcases a history of all declarations from 1953-2008 for major disasters and emergencies in the United States.

Available at: http://www.cqpress.com/product/Disaster-Policy-and-Politics-Emergency.html

ICMA Principles and Practices of Emergency Management Green Book by William L. Waugh, Jr.

The 1991 ICMA green book on emergency management has been the standard for practitioner handbooks and textbooks in the field of emergency management. This is an updated version with new content for the ever changing world environment we live in. It is a hope that this volume also reflects changes in the profession of emergency management. The volume includes:

Part One: context and Organization of Emergency Management

Chapter 1: Local Emergency Management in the Post 9/1 World

Chapter 2: Local Emergency Management: Origins and Evolution

Chapter 3: Organizing for Emergency Management

Chapter 4: The Intergovernmental Aspects of Emergency Management

Chapter 5: Collaborative Emergency Management

Part Two: Functions and Phases of Emergency management

Chapter 6: Mitigation

Chapter 7: Planning and Preparedness

Chapter 8: Applied Response Strategies

Chapter 9: Disaster Response

Chapter 10: The Role of the Health Sector in Planning and Response

Chapter 11: Post Disaster Recovery

Part Three: Major Issues in Emergency Management

Chapter 12: Legal issues

Chapter 13: Identifying and Addressing Social Vulnerabilities

Chapter 14: New Information Technologies in Emergency Management

Chapter 15: Budgeting for Emergency Management

Chapter 16: Future Directions in Emergency Management

This book can be obtained at the ICMA bookstore. Http://bookstore.icma.org

Emergency Management Professionals-Body of Knowledge Survey 2008 by Carol Cwiak

This is an annual survey sent to colleges and universities that have disaster management degrees. The purpose is to determine which texts are most commonly used and are felt to be the top ten “must reads” for emergency management students and professionals. Responses were from undergraduate and graduate certificate and degree programs. A brief synopsis follows:

44 responses received (n=39)

340 total selections

208 list entries total

48% were specific to one respondent (single entries)

Books rated in the highest rankings listed (bolds are first time appearing)

Body of Knowledge 2008 / Number of Times Selected / Percentage of Respondents
Selected
1 / Emergency Planning (Perry & Lindell) / 16 / 41%
2 / Introduction to Emergency Management (Haddow & Bullock) / 12 / 31%
3 / Disasters By Design: A Reassessment of Natural Disasters in the U.S.(Mileti)
Emergency Management: Concepts and Strategies for Effective Programs (Canton)
Emergency Management: The American Experience (Rubin) / 9 / 23%
4 / Introduction to Emergency Management (Lindell, Prater & Perry) / 8 / 21%
5 / The 9/11 Commission Report / 7 / 18%
6 / Emergency Management Principles and Practices for Local Government*(Waugh & Tierney) / 6 / 15%
7 / At Risk: Natural Hazards, People’s Vulnerability and Disasters (Wisner, et al.)
Disaster Response and Recovery (McEntire)
Facing the Unexpected: Disaster Preparedness and Response in the U.S.(Tierney, Lindell, Perry)
Living with Hazards, Dealing with Disasters (Waugh)
National Response Framework (NRF)
Technology in Emergency Management (Pine) / 5 / 13%
8 / NIMS
The Edge of Disaster (Flynn) / 4 / 10%

The entire report can be found at: http://www.training.fema.gov/EMIWeb/edu/readinglist.asp

This paper represents the individual selection authors’ views and highlights of their materials presented. This is not a full description of content but is meant to give an overview of new emergency management materials being published. For further information or more in depth subject matter the actual texts should be consulted.