ProVention Publications

Latest publications

Learning from Recovery after Hurricane Mitch: Experience from Nicaragua – summary report
Cities and Resilience: summary report and policy brief
Climate Change Adaptation Strategies for Local Impact: Key Messages for UNFCCC Negotiators
Responding to Urban Disasters: Learning from previous relief and recovery operations

2009

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2005

Natural Disaster Hotspots: A Global Risk Analysis

Content:

Disaster Risk Management Working Paper Series No. 5
Earthquakes, floods, drought, and other natural hazards cause tens of thousands of deaths, hundreds of thousands of injuries, and billions of dollars in economic losses each year around the world. Many billions of dollars in humanitarian assistance, emergency loans, and development aid are expended annually. Yet efforts to reduce the risks of natural hazards remain largely uncoordinated across different hazard types and do not necessarily focus on areas at highest risk of disaster.
Natural Disaster Hotspots presents a global view of major natural disaster risk hotspots' areas at relatively high risk of loss from one or more natural hazards. It summarizes the results of an interdisciplinary analysis of the location and characteristics of hotspots for six natural hazards: earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, floods, drought, and cyclones. Data on these hazards are combined with state-of-the-art data on the subnational distribution of population and economic output and past disaster losses to identify areas at relatively high risk from one or more hazards.

Author:

Maxx Dilley, Robert S. Chen, Uwe Deichmann, Arthur L. Lerner-Lam, Margaret Arnold

Organisation:

World Bank

Details:

pdf, 30.9MB (very large file)

Language:

English

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