1st Edition

Disaster Diplomacy How Disasters Affect Peace and Conflict

By Ilan Kelman Copyright 2012
182 Pages
by Routledge

182 Pages
by Routledge

184 Pages
by Routledge

When an earthquake hits a war zone or cyclone aid is flown in by an enemy, many ask: Can catastrophe bring peace? Disaster prevention and mitigation provide similar questions. Could setting up a flood warning system bring enemy countries together? Could a regional earthquake building code set the groundwork for wider regional cooperation? This book examines how and why disaster-related... Read more

1. The Origins of Disaster Diplomacy  2. Moving Forward with Disaster Diplomacy  3. Hypotheses and Research Questions  4. Empirical Evidence: Case Studies  5. Analyses and Typologies for Disaster Diplomacy  6. Explaining Disaster Diplomacy’s Successes  7. Explaining Disaster Diplomacy’s Failures  8. Spin-Offs  9. Limitations  10. Principal Lessons for Application  11. Filling in the Gaps  12. The Future of Disaster Diplomacy

Biography

Dr Ilan Kelman is a Senior Research Fellow at the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research – Oslo (CICERO). His main research and application interests are disaster diplomacy and sustainability for island communities.

'Disaster Diplomacy is the first publication to provide a detailed, in-depth review incorporating the topics of disasters and politics within a disaster-diplomacy framework.[...] Given this is the first book specifically on Disaster Diplomacy, it represents a highly significant contribution to the disaster and diplomacy-related fields of study. The book narrows its scope to building upon one specific series of investigations (Kelman and Koukis, 2000), yet it does not neglect the vast depth of work which has gone before it, as evidenced by the in-depth reference list. Disaster Diplomacy is well organised with a logical flow which is easy to follow and understand. The author provides practical and well balanced arguments supported by a diverse range of case studies covering the Asian, African, North American and European continents. These will be of extreme benefit to applied researchers, policy and decision makers within the disaster and politics fields.[...]The book successfully presents a balance of arguments, whilst outlining gaps and limitations needing further exploration. As the author himself outlines 'disaster-diplomacy outcomes are never certain'[p149], a statement which in itself necessitates further investigation and study. This book provides a pivotal contribution and a generous baseline upon which further exploration of the disaster-diplomacy field can develop and expand.'

Dr Jessica Mercer - Secure Futures.

'Ilan Kelman takes a hard look via theory and case studies at the diplomatic impact of disasters... Kelman offers a sophisticated analysis of the successes and failures of disaster diplomacy since 2000.'

Natural Hazards Observer, March 2013