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Pre-Disaster Risk Management in Post-Earthquake (1999) Turkey
(2010)
  • ENGIN I ERDEM, Mr., Florida International University
Abstract
This paper assesses the status of pre-disaster risk management in the case of Turkey. By focusing on the period following the catastrophic August 17, 1999 earthquake, the study benefits from USAID’s Disaster Risk Management Benchmarking Tool (DRMBT). In line with the benchmarking tool, the paper covers key developments in the four components of pre-disaster risk management, namely: risk identification, risk mitigation, risk transfer and disaster preparedness. In the end, it will present three major conclusions: (i) Although post-1999 Turkey has made some important progress in the pre-disaster phase of DRM, particularly with the enactment of obligatory earthquake insurance and tightened standards for building construction, the country is far away from substantial levels of success in DRM. (ii) In recent years, local governments have had been given more authority in the realm of DRM, however, Turkey’s approach to DRM is still predominantly centralized at the expense of successful DRM practices at the local level. (iii) While the devastating 1999 earthquake has resulted in advances in the pre-disaster components of DRM; progress has been mostly in the realm of earthquakes. Turkey’s other major disasters (landslides, floods, wild fires i.e.) also require similar attention by local and central authorities.
Keywords
  • disaster risk management,
  • turkey,
  • earthquakes,
  • risk management,
  • disaster preparedness
Publication Date
Winter December 17, 2010
Comments
Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Program, Florida International University
Citation Information
ENGIN I ERDEM. "Pre-Disaster Risk Management in Post-Earthquake (1999) Turkey" (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/enginerdem/8/