Australian Journal of Emergency Management Volume 23, 2008
Issue 1 | Issue 2 | Issue 3 | Issue 4
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Volume 23, Issue Three, August 2008 The use of applied drama in crisis management: an empirical psychological study Crisis communication and multimodal decision making on the fireground Communication with disaster survivors: towards best practice Total flood warning systems Emergency management of tsunami in New South Wales and the response to the Solomon Islands tsunami April 2nd 2007 Public behaviour during a pandemic Living with bushfire risk: social and environmental influences on preparedness An economic assessment of the voluntary land search and rescue sector in New Zealand Gen Y and emergency management: How do we engage generation Y in the emergency management sector? |
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Download complete issue in parts:
AJEM for August 2008 - Part 1 [PDF 4.7KB]
AJEM for August 2008 - Part 2 [PDF 3.4KB]
AJEM for August 2008 - Part 3 [PDF 3.2KB]
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Volume 23, Issue Two, May 2008 Communique: A new approach to community flood education Litigation for failure to warn of natural hazards and community resilience Paramedics’ perceptions of risk and willingness to work during disasters An interdisciplinary analytical study on the risk preparedness of Bam and its cultural landscape, a world heritage property in danger in Iran Differentiated adjustment to the 1991 Mt Pinatubo resettlement program among lowland ethnic groups of the Philippines Role of building codes and construction standards in windstorm disaster mitigation Legal risks of volunteer firefighters – how real are they? Future challenges for volunteer based emergency services Community based disaster preparedness: Need for a standardized training module Book Launch |
Download complete issue of AJEM for May 2008 (PDF 3.6MB)
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Volume 23, Issue One, February 2008 In Profile: The Hon. Robert McClelland MP Managing tsunami risk in coastal communities: identifying predictors of preparedness How people responded to the April 2007 tsunami warning in Cairns and Townsville Policy development and design for fire and emergency management Glimpses of ‘community’ through the lens of a small fire event Fire, families and decisions Are house fires changing? Weighing up the risks – the decision to purchase housing on a flood plain REPORTS Australasian libraries in the emergency sector – information catalysts Identifying nationally recognised emergency management Skills Sets Book Review |
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Download the entire February 2008 edition of AJEM (PDF 2283 KB)







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