Authors: John C. Mutter
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Sociology, #Urban, #Disasters & Disaster Relief, #Science, #Environmental Science, #Architecture
2.
Binyamin Appelbaum, “U.S. Economic Recovery Looks Distant as Growth Stalls,”
New York Times,
June 11, 2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/12/business/economy/us-economic-recovery-looks-distant-as-growth-lingers.html
.
3.
The area is
L
(
T
i
â
T
e
)/2, where
i
is either 1 or 2.
T
e
can be made zero without loss of generality; then it is clear that the lower area is greater than the upper.
4.
Jeremy Ashkenas and Alicia Parlapiano, “How the Recession Reshaped the Economy in 255 Charts,”
New York Times,
June 6, 2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/06/05/upshot/how-the-recession-reshaped-the-economy-in-255-charts.html?_r=0
.
5.
This figure and the previous are similar to those presented by Stéphane Hallegate and Michael Ghil, “Natural Disasters Impacting a Macroeconomic Model with Endogenous Dynamics,”
Ecological Economics
68, nos. 1â2 (2008): 582â92. Their work provided significant inspiration for the discussion in this section.
Technical Appendix II: Disasters in Neoclassical Growth Theory
1.
Robert M. Solow, “A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth,”
Quarterly Journal of
Economics
70, no. 1 (1956): 65â94; doi:10.2307/1884513; Trevor W. Swan, “Economic Growth and Capital Accumulation,”
Economic Record
32, no. 2 (1956): 334â361, doi:10.1111/j.1475-4932.1956.tb00434.x. Robert M. Solow, “Technical Change and the Aggregate Production Function,”
Review of Economics and Statistics
39, no. 3 (1957): 312â320, doi:10.2307/1926047.
2.
According to the
Encyclopaedia Britannica,
in economics, the production function is an equation that expresses the relationship between the quantities of productive factors (such as labor and capital) used and the amount of product obtained. It states the amount of product that can be obtained from every combination of factors, assuming that the most efficient available methods of production are used.
3.
Costas Azariadis and John Stachurski, “Poverty Traps,” in
Handbook of Economic Growth,
Philippe Aghion & Steven Durlauf, eds. (ed. 1, vol. 1, no. 1, Elsevier, 2005), 326. The Wikipedia entry under “Poverty Traps” is useful and refers to Sachs's work. Also see Abhijit V. Banerjee and Ester Duflo,
Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty
(New York: Public Affairs/Perseus Book Group, 2011).
4.
Stéphane Hallegatte and Michael Ghil, “Natural Disasters Impacting a Macroeconomic Model with Endogenous Dynamics,”
Ecological Economics
68 (2008): 582â92, doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2008.05.022.
Index
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
see also
earthquakes
agriculture
see
farming
Ambraseys, Nicholas,
97
American Human Development Project,
160
Aquino, Benigno Simeon III,
157
Aristide, Jean-Bertrand,
85
,
104
â5
Army Corps of Engineers,
172
Aronson, Eliot,
172
Asian Development Bank,
80
atomic bomb,
25
Balko, Radley,
215
Bennett, Drake,
14
Berube, Alan,
160
Big Mac Index,
44
Big Truck That Went By, The
(Katz), 83
Bohr, Niels,
24
BP (British Petroleum),
19
Bronson, William,
32
Brookings Institution,
92
,
160
,
203
Broussard, Aaron,
163
Brown, Michael,
165
,
173
â74,
184
,
213
,
217
building assessment and rubble removal (BARR),
90
â91
Bush, George H. W.,
184
Bush, George W.,
157
,
163
â65,
172
â74,
176
,
178
,
184
â85,
198
,
201
Campanella, Richard,
206
â7
capital losses,
41
â46
Capital in the Twenty-first Century
(Piketty),
42
,
220
Caracol,
118
â22
Center for Economic Policy and Research (CEPR),
118
Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN),
51
Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED),
28
,
31
,
39
Centers for Disease Control,
34
,
80
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
42
,
122
,
140
Chayes, Sarah,
97
Chess, Caron,
182
Children's Blizzard of 1888,
31
,
33
Children's Blizzard, The
(Laskin),
31
Chile,
6
,
12
,
60
,
65
,
88
,
109
â15,
121
â22,
150
chimeres,
87
Clarke, Lee,
182
Clarkson, Jackie,
179
climate change,
3
â4,
25
â28,
58
â59,
78
,
131
,
173
â74,
213
,
222
Clinton Foundation,
119
Clinton, Hillary,
118
â19
Colbert, Stephen,
26
Collier, Paul,
116
â17
Condon, Emmit,
32
corruption
death reporting and,
91
disaster and,
71
,
76
â77,
97
,
122
,
137
,
202
Hurricane Katrina and,
1
militarization and,
223
Philippines and,
157
creative destruction,
13
â14,
110
,
131
â32,
154
,
192
,
205
Cuba,
49
Culture of Calamity
(Rozario), 193
cyclones
Bohla,
64
death tolls and,
35
â37
measuring,
63
Nargis,
31
,
141
,
145
â50,
154
â56,
158
,
163
,
217
poverty and,
77
â79
Saffir-Simpson scale,
63
Sidr,
64
Superstorm Sandy compared to,
80
â81
tracks of,
58
â59
Dacy, Douglas,
14
Davis, Mike,
196
â97
De Bernardinis, Bernardo,
69
â70
death tolls
Cyclone Nargis and,
146
â48
disaster recovery and,
19
economic loss and,
16
Haiti earthquake and,
89
â90,
101
,
109
,
122
Hurricane Katrina and,
166
â68,
171
,
197
Indian Ocean tsunami and,
128
Superstorm Sandy and,
208
Deep Water Horizon,
17
Denial of Disaster
(Hansen and Condon),
32
disaster risk reduction (DRR),
4
,
23
,
30
,
220
displacement,
37
â39,
64
â65,
103
,
125
,
135
,
156
,
219
DMORT (Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team) facilities,
89
donations, relief efforts and,
92
,
117
,
122
,
129
,
131
,
137
drought,
12
,
19
,
35
,
37
â38,
45
,
59
,
222
,
256
â7n29
Duvalier, Papa Doc,
87
,
104
,
117
,
141
â42
Earth Shook, the Sky Burned, The
(Bronson),
32
earthquakes
death tolls Haiti and,
89
â90,
101
,
109
,
122
Japan and,
28
,
64
â65,
74
â75,
132
â38
predicting,
2
â3,
61
,
64
â70,
77
,
94
,
97
â98
see also
Haiti; seismology
economic loss,
16
â17,
39
â40,
42
,
231
Einstein, Albert,
24
Eisenhower, Dwight,
185
elite panic,
182
â83
Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT),
28
farming
China and,
96
Cyclone Nargis and,
147
drought and,
38
Japan and,
134
Okeechobee hurricane and,
166
â67
Farmland Law,
155
faults,
66
â70,
75
,
93
,
98
,
135
â36
Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault,
66
,
119
â20
Paganica Fault,
98
San Andreas Fault,
66
Septentrional Fault,
119
â21
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA),
18
,
30
,
164
â66,
174
â78,
194
,
202
,
209
Ferguson, Missouri,
213
â15,
221
Ferris, Elizabeth,
92
Feynman, Richard,
2
,
5
,
24
â26,
224
floods
death tolls and,
33
â35
disasters and,
17
â19,
21
,
45
,
59
,
221
displacement and,
37
â38
Haiti and,
121
Hurricane Katrina and,
161
â62,
165
â72,
175
,
179
,
182
â83,
199
â200
injuries and,
35
Pakistan and,
92
positive aspects of,
10
,
12
â13,
59
, 147
Superstorm Sandy and,
208
â9
foreshocks,
68
â69
Fraiman, Keren,
173
French Quarter,
1
,
179
,
196
,
203
â4
Fukushima nuclear power plant,
132
â34
GDP (gross domestic product)
calculating,
42
disasters and,
10
â11,
14
,
47
,
226
flaws as measurement tool,
45
Haiti earthquake and,
42
,
86
,
110
,
116
,
121
inequality and,
42
â46
Japan and,
133
Sri Lanka and,
131
wealth and,
140
World Bank assessment of,
122
GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History
(Coyle),
42
genetically modified organisms (GMOs),
3
Global South,
53
Greatest Hoax, The
(Inhofe),
27
Greely, Adolphus,
32
Gregory, Jesse,
201
Haiti
2010 earthquake and,
88
â99
aftermath of earthquake,
102
â9
building codes in,
94
â97
Cité Soleil,
85
â88
class and,
83
â85
compared to earthquake in Chile,
109
â16,
121
â23
death toll in wake of 2010 earthquake,
88
â90
donations to,
92
â93
factors contributing to post-quake disaster,
99
â102
fault lines and,
119
â21
NGOs and,
87
â88
profiteering and,
83
â85
recovery,
116
â19
social inequality,
88
unemployment and,
86
variation in damage from earthquake,
97
â99
Halliburton,
201
Hansen, Gladys,
32
hazard,
23
High Plains blizzard of 1888
see
Children's Blizzard
Human Development Index (HDI),
111
,
140
,
160
,
226
Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, Gender, and the Sociology of Disaster
(Morrow),
14
Hurricane Katrina
accountability and,
157
evacuation and,
149
militarization and,
113
poverty and,
149
rebuilding after,
131
see also
New Orleans