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Disaster by Choice

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Disaster by Choice

How Our Actions Turn Natural Hazards into Catastrophes

Oxford UP,

15 min read
7 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

 Natural disasters do not exist, only those made by man.

Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Eye Opening
  • Insider's Take

Recommendation

Ilan Kelman dives into the causes of disasters and the economic, cultural and psychological reasons individuals and societies let them happen. He insists that natural disasters do not exist. Kelman views the loss of life, livelihood and property that accompanies wildfires, earthquakes and hurricanes as measures of society’s vulnerabilities and of whether societies choose to eliminate or accept them.

Summary

People can elude disasters and thus “disasters are not natural.”

Earth, the oceans and space generate fires, earthquakes, deadly winds, floods, and, occasionally, solar storms or meteorites. These events may turn into disasters with significant loss of life and property. Though humans don’t cause them, these events do not constitute natural disasters.

Humans can cope with natural phenomena and prevent them from turning into disasters. Measures to prevent or mitigate losses exist, but individuals, society and governments often choose not to implement them.

Nature doesn’t generate disasters. People’s choices make disasters.

Haiti suffers multiple natural hazards with depressing frequency. Hurricanes, epidemics or earthquakes seem to visit the nation every decade or so, and sometimes in combination. In 2010, a strong earthquake – magnitude 7.0 – struck near Port-au-Prince. More than 150,000 Haitians died.

During recovery efforts, United Nations (UN) workers re-introduced cholera, which Haiti had eradicated. This killed 10,000 people. Given Haiti’s history, aid should have come before the next, inevitable calamity...

About the Author

Professor Ilan Kelman teaches disasters and health at University College London and the University of Agder in Norway.


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