03682oam 2200553 450 991081422400332120240131152642.01-317-46795-71-315-70347-51-317-46796-51-282-55479-497866125547970-7656-2135-510.4324/9781315703473 (OCoLC)611063996(MiFhGG)GVRL3XQY(EXLCZ)99267000000001840420101008d2010 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtccrInformation systems for emergency management /Bartel van de Walle, Murray Turoff, Starr Roxanne Hiltz, editorsArmonk, N.Y. :M.E. Sharpe,2010.1 online resource (xii, 410 pages) illustrations, mapAdvances in management information systems,1554-6152 ;v. 16First published 2010 by M.E. Sharpe.0-7656-2134-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Series Page; Advisory Board; Contents; Series Editor's Introduction; 1. The Domain of Emergency Management Information; PART I. Foundations; 2. Structuring the Problem Space of User Interface Design for Disaster Response Technologies; 3. Protecting the Public Addressing Individual Rights: Ethical Issues in Emergency Management Information Systems for Public Health Emergencies; PART II. Individual and Organizational Context; 4. Mitigating Maladaptive Threat Rigidity Responses to Crisis5. Do Expert Teams in Rapid Crisis Response Use Their Tools Efficiently?PART III. Case Studies; 6. STATPackTM: An Emergency Response System for Microbiology Laboratory Diagnostics and Consultation; 7.Coordination of Emergency Response: An Examination of the Roles of People, Process, and Information Technology; 8. The Challenge Facing Humanitarian MIS: A Study of the Information Management System for Mine Action in Iraq; 9. User Perspectives on the Minnesota Interorganizational Mayday Information System; PART IV. EMIS Design and Technology; 10. Simulation and Emergency Management11. Conceptualizing a User-Support Task Structure for Geocollaborative Disaster Management Environments12. Operational Applications of Space Technologies in International Humanitarian Emergency Response; 13. Near Real-Time Global Disaster Impact Analysis; 14. Toward Standards-Based Resource Management Systems for Emergency Management; 15. Requirements and Open Architecture for Environmental Risk Management Information Systems; 16. Emergency Response Information Systems: Past, Present, and Future; Editors and Contributors; Series Editor; IndexThis book provides the most current and comprehensive overview avaliable today of the critical role of information systems in emergency response and preparedness, It includes contributions from leading scholars, practitioners, and industry researchers, and covers all phases of disaster management--mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery.Advances in management information systems.Management information systemsEmergency managementManagement information systems.Emergency management.363.340684Walle Bartel van deTuroff MurrayHiltz Starr RoxanneMiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910814224003321Information systems for emergency management4105498UNINA