Intersting report, focuses on the role of information in diasters and
disaster relief

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http://www.ifrc.org/publicat/wdr2005/index.asp



World Disasters Report 2005
    
People need information as much as water, food, medicine or shelter.
Information can save lives, livelihoods and resources. It may be the only
form of disaster preparedness that the most vulnerable can afford. The right
kind of information leads to a deeper understanding of needs and ways to
respond. The wrong information can lead to inappropriate, even dangerous
interventions.

Information bestows power. Lack of information can make people victims of
disaster. Do aid organizations use information to accumulate power for
themselves or to empower others? The report calls on agencies to focus less
on gathering information for their own needs and more on exchanging
information with the people they seek to support.

The World Disasters Report 2005 features:

    Data or dialogue? The role of information in disasters

    Hurricane early warning in the Caribbean

    Locusts in West Africa: early warning, late response

    Information black hole in Aceh

    Sharing information for tsunami recovery in South Asia

    Humanitarian media coverage in the digital age

    Radio in Afghanistan: challenging perceptions, changing behaviour

    Disaster data: key databases, trends and statistics

Plus: photos, tables, maps, graphics, Red Cross Red Crescent contacts and
index

Published annually since 1993, the World Disasters Report brings together
the latest trends, facts and analysis of contemporary crises ­ whether
'natural' or human-made, quick-onset or chronic.
            


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