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Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Autore Kelman Ilan
Pubbl/distr/stampa Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (181 p.)
Disciplina 363.34/56
Soggetto topico Disaster relief
Emergency management
Humanitarian assistance
Conflict management
Political violence - Prevention
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-283-44180-2
9786613441805
0-203-80621-2
1-136-65373-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Disaster Diplomacy; Copyright Page; Contents; List of tables; 1. The origins of disaster diplomacy; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 A brief history of disaster diplomacy; 2. Moving forward with disaster diplomacy; 2.1 What this volume offers; 2.2 What this volume does not offer; 2.3 The structure of this volume; 3. Hypotheses and research questions; 3.1 Definitions of disaster diplomacy; 3.2 Hypothesis: catalysis, not creation; 3.3 Questions for disaster diplomacy; 4. Empirical evidence: Case studies; 4.1 Organising case studies; 4.2 Iran-USA from 1990 onwards
4.3 The Philippines from 1990 onwards4.4 Southern Africa 1991-93; 4.5 North Korea from 1995 onwards; 4.6 Cuba-USA from 1998 onwards; 4.7 Greece-Turkey from 1999 onwards; 4.8 Eritrea-Ethiopia 2000-02; 4.9 India-Pakistan in 2001 and 2005; 4.10 26 December 2004 tsunamis: Sri Lanka and Aceh; 4.11 26 December 2004 tsunamis: other locations; 4.12 Hurricane Katrina in 2005; 4.13 Two May 2008 disasters; 4.14 Island evacuation due to sea-level rise; 4.15 Disaster-casualty identification; 4.16 International vaccination programmes; 4.17 Summing up the case studies
5. Analyses and typologies for disaster diplomacy5.1 Quantitative analyses; 5.2 Qualitative typologies; 5.3 No predictive model; 5.4 Summarising the typologies; 6. Explaining disaster diplomacy's successes; 6.1 Success pathways; 6.2 Further success: tit-for-tat; 6.3 Further success: mirror disaster diplomacy; 7. Explaining disaster diplomacy's failures; 7.1 Failure pathways; 7.2 Further failure: inverse disaster diplomacy; 7.3 Further failure: disaster-related activities exacerbating conflict; 8. Spin-offs; 8.1 Environmental diplomacy; 8.2 Para-diplomacy and beyond; 9. Limitations; 9.1 Ethics
9.2 Confounding factors9.3 Bias; 10. Principal lessons for application; 10.1 Be ready for assistance offers from enemies; 10.2 All diplomacy tracks can be useful; 10.3 Disaster diplomacy operates at many levels; 10.4 Lessons should be implemented, not forgotten; 11. Filling in the gaps; 11.1 Can the limitations be overcome?; 11.2 Why further study disaster diplomacy?; 11.3 Main gaps to be overcome; 12. The future of disaster diplomacy; References; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910457531803321
Kelman Ilan  
Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Autore Kelman Ilan
Pubbl/distr/stampa Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (181 p.)
Disciplina 363.34/56
Soggetto topico Disaster relief
Emergency management
Humanitarian assistance
Conflict management
Political violence - Prevention
ISBN 1-136-65372-4
1-283-44180-2
9786613441805
0-203-80621-2
1-136-65373-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Disaster Diplomacy; Copyright Page; Contents; List of tables; 1. The origins of disaster diplomacy; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 A brief history of disaster diplomacy; 2. Moving forward with disaster diplomacy; 2.1 What this volume offers; 2.2 What this volume does not offer; 2.3 The structure of this volume; 3. Hypotheses and research questions; 3.1 Definitions of disaster diplomacy; 3.2 Hypothesis: catalysis, not creation; 3.3 Questions for disaster diplomacy; 4. Empirical evidence: Case studies; 4.1 Organising case studies; 4.2 Iran-USA from 1990 onwards
4.3 The Philippines from 1990 onwards4.4 Southern Africa 1991-93; 4.5 North Korea from 1995 onwards; 4.6 Cuba-USA from 1998 onwards; 4.7 Greece-Turkey from 1999 onwards; 4.8 Eritrea-Ethiopia 2000-02; 4.9 India-Pakistan in 2001 and 2005; 4.10 26 December 2004 tsunamis: Sri Lanka and Aceh; 4.11 26 December 2004 tsunamis: other locations; 4.12 Hurricane Katrina in 2005; 4.13 Two May 2008 disasters; 4.14 Island evacuation due to sea-level rise; 4.15 Disaster-casualty identification; 4.16 International vaccination programmes; 4.17 Summing up the case studies
5. Analyses and typologies for disaster diplomacy5.1 Quantitative analyses; 5.2 Qualitative typologies; 5.3 No predictive model; 5.4 Summarising the typologies; 6. Explaining disaster diplomacy's successes; 6.1 Success pathways; 6.2 Further success: tit-for-tat; 6.3 Further success: mirror disaster diplomacy; 7. Explaining disaster diplomacy's failures; 7.1 Failure pathways; 7.2 Further failure: inverse disaster diplomacy; 7.3 Further failure: disaster-related activities exacerbating conflict; 8. Spin-offs; 8.1 Environmental diplomacy; 8.2 Para-diplomacy and beyond; 9. Limitations; 9.1 Ethics
9.2 Confounding factors9.3 Bias; 10. Principal lessons for application; 10.1 Be ready for assistance offers from enemies; 10.2 All diplomacy tracks can be useful; 10.3 Disaster diplomacy operates at many levels; 10.4 Lessons should be implemented, not forgotten; 11. Filling in the gaps; 11.1 Can the limitations be overcome?; 11.2 Why further study disaster diplomacy?; 11.3 Main gaps to be overcome; 12. The future of disaster diplomacy; References; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910779072603321
Kelman Ilan  
Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Disaster diplomacy : how disasters affect peace and conflict / / Ilan Kelman
Autore Kelman Ilan
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (181 p.)
Disciplina 363.34/56
Soggetto topico Disaster relief
Emergency management
Humanitarian assistance
Conflict management
Political violence - Prevention
ISBN 1-136-65372-4
1-283-44180-2
9786613441805
0-203-80621-2
1-136-65373-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Disaster Diplomacy; Copyright Page; Contents; List of tables; 1. The origins of disaster diplomacy; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 A brief history of disaster diplomacy; 2. Moving forward with disaster diplomacy; 2.1 What this volume offers; 2.2 What this volume does not offer; 2.3 The structure of this volume; 3. Hypotheses and research questions; 3.1 Definitions of disaster diplomacy; 3.2 Hypothesis: catalysis, not creation; 3.3 Questions for disaster diplomacy; 4. Empirical evidence: Case studies; 4.1 Organising case studies; 4.2 Iran-USA from 1990 onwards
4.3 The Philippines from 1990 onwards4.4 Southern Africa 1991-93; 4.5 North Korea from 1995 onwards; 4.6 Cuba-USA from 1998 onwards; 4.7 Greece-Turkey from 1999 onwards; 4.8 Eritrea-Ethiopia 2000-02; 4.9 India-Pakistan in 2001 and 2005; 4.10 26 December 2004 tsunamis: Sri Lanka and Aceh; 4.11 26 December 2004 tsunamis: other locations; 4.12 Hurricane Katrina in 2005; 4.13 Two May 2008 disasters; 4.14 Island evacuation due to sea-level rise; 4.15 Disaster-casualty identification; 4.16 International vaccination programmes; 4.17 Summing up the case studies
5. Analyses and typologies for disaster diplomacy5.1 Quantitative analyses; 5.2 Qualitative typologies; 5.3 No predictive model; 5.4 Summarising the typologies; 6. Explaining disaster diplomacy's successes; 6.1 Success pathways; 6.2 Further success: tit-for-tat; 6.3 Further success: mirror disaster diplomacy; 7. Explaining disaster diplomacy's failures; 7.1 Failure pathways; 7.2 Further failure: inverse disaster diplomacy; 7.3 Further failure: disaster-related activities exacerbating conflict; 8. Spin-offs; 8.1 Environmental diplomacy; 8.2 Para-diplomacy and beyond; 9. Limitations; 9.1 Ethics
9.2 Confounding factors9.3 Bias; 10. Principal lessons for application; 10.1 Be ready for assistance offers from enemies; 10.2 All diplomacy tracks can be useful; 10.3 Disaster diplomacy operates at many levels; 10.4 Lessons should be implemented, not forgotten; 11. Filling in the gaps; 11.1 Can the limitations be overcome?; 11.2 Why further study disaster diplomacy?; 11.3 Main gaps to be overcome; 12. The future of disaster diplomacy; References; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910816315303321
Kelman Ilan  
Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui