(Consecutive) Disasters: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "'''Definition''' Two or more disasters that occur in succession, and whose direct impacts overlap spatially before recovery from a previous event is completed. '''Source''' de Ruiter, M.C., Couasnon, A., van den Homberg, M.J., Daniell, J.E., Gill, J.C., & Ward, P.J. (2020). Why we can no longer ignore consecutive disasters. Earth's future, 8(3), e2019EF001425 Back to '''Definitions'''"
 
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de Ruiter, M.C., Couasnon, A., van den Homberg, M.J., Daniell, J.E., Gill, J.C., & Ward, P.J. (2020). Why we can no longer ignore consecutive disasters. Earth's future, 8(3), e2019EF001425
de Ruiter, M.C., Couasnon, A., van den Homberg, M.J., Daniell, J.E., Gill, J.C., & Ward, P.J. (2020). Why we can no longer ignore consecutive disasters. Earth's future, 8(3), e2019EF001425


'''See also''': [https://www.undrr.org/terminology/disaster <span style="color: fuchsia">Disaster</span>]


Back to '''[[Definitions]]'''
Back to '''[[Definitions]]'''

Revision as of 10:58, 8 July 2022

Definition

Two or more disasters that occur in succession, and whose direct impacts overlap spatially before recovery from a previous event is completed.

Source

de Ruiter, M.C., Couasnon, A., van den Homberg, M.J., Daniell, J.E., Gill, J.C., & Ward, P.J. (2020). Why we can no longer ignore consecutive disasters. Earth's future, 8(3), e2019EF001425

See also: Disaster

Back to Definitions