David E Alexander’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Principles of Emergency Planning and Management
  • Book

January 2002

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3,588 Reads

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690 Citations

David E Alexander

As interest in planning for emergencies and disasters burgeons, and educational and training programs proliferate, Principles of emergency planning and management is the first book to meet the need for a concise yet comprehensive and systematic primer on how to prepare for a disaster. Providing readers with a comprehensive, systematic, yet concise introduction to effective preparation for disasters, it provides a unified starting point encompassing the scattered and parochial literature in this nascent field of academic enquiry and practical endeavor. The book provides a general introduction to the methods, procedures, protocols and strategies of emergency planning, with emphasis on situations in industrialized countries and the local level of organization (i.e. cities, municipalities, metropolitan areas and small regions), though with ample reference to national and international levels. Rather than concentrating on the practices of any one country or state, the author focuses on general principles. Principles of emergency planning and management is designed to be a reference source and manual from which emergency managers can extract ideas, suggestions and pro-forma methodologies to help them design and implement emergency plans. A comprehensive all-hazards approach is adopted, with frequent reference to the most important individual hazards and the planning and management needs that they create. Twelve examples of actual emergency planning and management problems are analyzed in detail. Principles of emergency planning and management is written especially for the new generation of emergency planners and managers that is emerging as a result of intensified governmental interest in disaster preparedness. Many of them will occupy positions in government or other organizations that require emergency plans. The book will also be of value to students of disasters and hazards who have a practical interest in how disasters are planned for and managed, and to professional workers and trainees who will eventually have to participate in disaster plans. Principles of emergency planning and management is designed to be easily integrated with training courses in emergency preparedness.

Citations (1)


... The term tacit was invented by (Polanyi, 1967) and used to describe a form of knowledge that ingrained in individual, understanding, skills, beliefs, perspectives (Alexander, 2002;Lewis, 2004;Sotoodeh and Kruchten, 2008). Tacit knowledge can be understood as ingrained in someone's mind based on capability and affected by comprehensions and values (Hakanson, 2010;Ng and Chiu, 2006). ...

Reference:

ONTOLOGY-BASED CONCEPTUAL MODEL FOR BUSINESS PROCESS IMPROVEMENT METHOD IN COMPLEX INFORMATION SYSTEMS (Onto-BPIM) EHAB AZHARY SEED AHMED MOHAMMED SALIH UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIA
Principles of Emergency Planning and Management
  • Citing Book
  • January 2002