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Full Description
In this indispensable and comprehensive text, Scott D. Watson critically examines the current understanding of international order that underpins international disaster management and disaster diplomacy.
Based on empirical analysis of the three international disaster management regimes - disaster relief, disaster risk reduction, and disaster migration - and case studies of disaster diplomacy in the United States, Egypt and China, Watson argues that international disaster management and disaster diplomacy are not simply efforts to reduce the impact of disasters or to manage bilateral relations but to reinforce key beliefs about the larger international order. Challenging the conventional understandings of disasters as natural, as exogenous shocks, or as unintended and accidental outcomes of the current order, this text shows how the ideological foundations of the current heterogenous international order produce recurrent disasters.
International Order and the Politics of Disaster is a vital source for undergraduate or graduate students interested in international responses to disasters and complex humanitarian emergencies, forced migration and displacement, as well as climate change and development.
Contents
1. Introduction 2. The Ideological Foundations of International Order Section 1: International Disaster Management Regimes: Relief, Risk Reduction, and Migration 3. The International Disaster Relief Regime 4. Disaster Risk Reduction 5. Disaster Displacement and Migration Section 2: Disaster Diplomacy and Relief in Practice 6. The United States and Hurricane Katrina 7. Egypt and the Cairo Earthquake 8. China and Change in International Order Conclusion