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Some emerging issues in emergency management.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: ENG Series: Monograph series (Federal Emergency Management Agency (U.S.)) ; Vol 1 No 3Publication details: 1984Description: 24p., 17 refs, 4 figsReport number: FEMA-105; National GovernmentSubject: This monograph examines several emerging policy issues in emergency management and their relationship to present and future national policy. Examined are: 1) the influence of personal biases and experiences on the derivation of individual assumptions which serve to structure our perceptions concerning how emergency management issues should or should not be prioritized; 2) six national trends that could have some future impact on emergency management policy; 3) the stake holders in emergency management (e.g. constituents) who collectively surface important, yet different, candidate policy issues which must be considered during the policy formulation process; and, 4) a temporal framework for use in identifying, analyzing and prioritizing common policy issues related to emergency management that cut across a broad spectrum of disaster agents
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Australian Emergency Management Library BOOK 363.34525 DRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 005264388

This monograph examines several emerging policy issues in emergency management and their relationship to present and future national policy. Examined are: 1) the influence of personal biases and experiences on the derivation of individual assumptions which serve to structure our perceptions concerning how emergency management issues should or should not be prioritized; 2) six national trends that could have some future impact on emergency management policy; 3) the stake holders in emergency management (e.g. constituents) who collectively surface important, yet different, candidate policy issues which must be considered during the policy formulation process; and, 4) a temporal framework for use in identifying, analyzing and prioritizing common policy issues related to emergency management that cut across a broad spectrum of disaster agents

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