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Rebuilding housing after a disaster : factors for failure

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 22:00 authored by Zabihullah Sadiqi, Vaughan Coffey, Bambang TrigunarsyahBambang Trigunarsyah
Disasters, particularly those triggered by nature are often followed by a swift humanitarian relief response to address the resultant emergencies. These efforts are then transitioned through the medium recovery stage, eventually aimed at providing a long term post-disaster reconstruction solution. Emergency humanitarian relief focuses on responding to the immediate need for restoration of basic services, medical treatment and medical supplies, food and temporary shelter, and is a short term strenuous effort. Reconstruction of permanent houses, on the other hand, is a continuous process that often requires decades of effort to return a community to normality. Whilst emergency relief is generally perceived to be very effective, post-disaster housing reconstruction projects often fail to meet their set objectives. This paper outlines and discusses factors that contribute to the failure of post-disaster housing reconstruction projects and the subsequent immediate and long term negative impacts of failure on project outcomes.

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  1. 1.
    ISBN - Is published in 9784990643416 (urn:isbn:9784990643416)
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Start page

292

End page

300

Total pages

9

Outlet

Proceedings of the 8th Annual Conference of the International Institute for Infrastructure Renewal and Reconstruction (IIIRR 2012)

Editors

Shoshi Mizokami, Ryuji Kakimoto and Fumihiko Yamada

Name of conference

IIIRR 2012

Publisher

Kumamoto University

Place published

Kumamuto, Japan

Start date

2012-08-24

End date

2012-08-26

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Implementation Research and Education System Center for Reducing Disaster Risk (IRESC-RDR), Kumamoto University

Former Identifier

2006087677

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-10-24

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