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Collaborative emergency management: better community organising, better public preparedness and response
Naim Kapucu, Ph.D. 1
  1 Assistant Professor, Department of Public Administration, University of Central Florida, USA
  Correspondence
Naim Kapucu, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Public Administration, University of Central Florida, HPA II Suite 238M, Orlando, FL 32816–1395, USA. Phone: +1 407 823 6096; fax: +1 407 823 5651; e-mail: nkapucu@mail.ucf.edu.
Copyright © Overseas Development Institute, 2008
KEYWORDS
community coordination • disaster management • disaster response operations • hurricanes • public preparedness • repeated threats

ABSTRACT

Community coordination requires communication and planning of precautions to take when faced with a severe threat of disaster. The unique case of the four Florida hurricanes of 2004—Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne—is used here to assess community responses to repeated threats of hurricanes. The paper examines how effectiveness in coordinating community disaster response efforts affects future public preparedness. The findings suggest that pre-season planning, open communication between emergency managers and elected officials, and the use of technology all had a significant impact on community responses. The repeated threat scenario indicates that emergency managers must work vigilantly to keep residents informed of the seriousness of a situation. The study describes how emergency managers in Florida countered public complacency during four hurricanes in six weeks. The strategies identified as useful by public managers in the context of hurricanes are applicable to other natural and man-made disasters.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01037.x About DOI

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