Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

New Directions for Evaluation - 126: Enhancing Disaster and Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Through Evaluation

Parameters

  • 128 pages
  • 5 hours of reading

More about the book

The first priniciple of humanitarian assistance is "do no harm." The second might be, "do better!" Enter the evaluation of emergency and disaster management. This issue consolidates reflections from evaluation practices in disaster and emergency management. Our humanitarian impulse, as in the aftermaths of the Rwandan genocide, Hurricane Katrina, the Indian Ocean tsunami, and the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti, is an enduring quality. The route from donor to affected population is long and varied. When sudden, unprecedented needs are juxtaposed with expectional levels of charitable responses, the question is whether the responses were good enough. Did supply meet demand? Was it the right thing? Was it done well? Who received support? Was it appropriate? Was the timing right? Can it be improved? All are questions for evaluation. For populations traumatized by disaster, the answers have consequences for protection, for restoration of individual and community efficacy, and ultimately for hope and dignity.

Book purchase

New Directions for Evaluation - 126: Enhancing Disaster and Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Through Evaluation, Liesel Ashley Ritchie, Wayne MacDonald

Language
Released
2010
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
Price
€11.49

Payment methods

No one has rated yet.Add rating

Title
New Directions for Evaluation - 126: Enhancing Disaster and Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Through Evaluation
Language
English
Publisher
Jossey-Bass
Released
2010
Format
Paperback
Pages
128
ISBN10
0470769122
ISBN13
9780470769126
Series
Tags
Description
The first priniciple of humanitarian assistance is "do no harm." The second might be, "do better!" Enter the evaluation of emergency and disaster management. This issue consolidates reflections from evaluation practices in disaster and emergency management. Our humanitarian impulse, as in the aftermaths of the Rwandan genocide, Hurricane Katrina, the Indian Ocean tsunami, and the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti, is an enduring quality. The route from donor to affected population is long and varied. When sudden, unprecedented needs are juxtaposed with expectional levels of charitable responses, the question is whether the responses were good enough. Did supply meet demand? Was it the right thing? Was it done well? Who received support? Was it appropriate? Was the timing right? Can it be improved? All are questions for evaluation. For populations traumatized by disaster, the answers have consequences for protection, for restoration of individual and community efficacy, and ultimately for hope and dignity.