Final Paper- Psychology

RUNNING HEAD: ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPY 0

Annotated Bibliography for Final Paper

Laurie Schaalma

PSY610: Applied Social Psychology

Instructor:  Romona Banks

April 3, 2017

Alesch, Daniel, Lucy A. Arendt, and James M. Nolly. 2009. Managing Community Recovery in the Aftermath of Disaster for Long-Term. Fairfax, Va.: P.E.R.I. Press.

This volume depicts the trials in reinstating the communal, radical, and financial rudiments of a civic after a ruin. The envisioned spectators are together native bureaucrats and front-runners as it bonds the gap amid administration's spare reply and long-term public retrieval essential after a tragedy. Founded on centuries of collective investigation and situation trainings, it imparts students how to familiarize to new realisms and the new custom.

Berke, P., J. Kartez, and D. Wenger. 1993. "Recovery after Disaster: Achieving Sustainable Development, Mitigation and Equity." Disasters, 17(2), 93-109.

A training concentrating on the subjects of fairness, extenuation, and maintainable growth in catastrophe recapture, chiefly via local contribution in improvement preparation and official collaboration.

Birch, Eugenie L., and Susan M. Wachter. 2006. Rebuilding Urban Places after Disaster: Lessons from Hurricane Katrina. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

The manuscript defines the heavy and unavoidable occurrence of tragedies in our contemporary world, particularly the uneven effect on metropolises due to their high thickness. Using Hurricane Katrina as an incident study, the writers focus on four key points: enhancing cities less susceptible, firming economic strength, replying to the wants of the displaced and evacuated in an emergency, and re-forming a sense of safety and homebased. Printed immediately after the hurricane, this effort offers teachings educated and best performs.

Citizen Corps (2006). Citizen corps personal behavior change model for disaster preparedness. Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency. Retrieved from https://www.citizencorps.fema.gov/downloads/pdf/ready/citizen_prep_review_issue_4.pdf

Gantt, P., & Gantt, R. (2012). Disaster psychology: Dispelling the myths of panic. Professional Safety, 42-49

Mileti, Dennis S. 1999. Disasters by Design. Washington, D.C.: The Joseph Henry Press.

An all-embracing inspection of Americans' arrogances to the dangers of the historical, current, and forthcoming. The tome shadows in the ladders of geographer Gilbert F. White and sociologist J. Eugene Haas in using the social disciplines to well comprehend the financial, community, and party-political consequences of dangerous natural proceedings.

Morrow, Betty Hearn. 1999. "Identifying and mapping community vulnerability." Disasters, 23(1), 1-18.

A study deliberating the rank of meaningful anywhere collections such as the deprived, the ageing, and recent inhabitants live in groups in order to find areas of possible susceptibility during normal tragedies. These public weakness plans can be combined into GIS schemes for cooler admittance.