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Systematization and Sharing of Disaster Management Literacy by DMLH
Author(s) -
Reo Kimura,
Haruo Hayashi,
Shingo Suzuki,
Kosuke Kobayashi,
Kenshin Urabe,
Satoshi Inoue,
Takahiro Nishino
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of disaster research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1883-8030
pISSN - 1881-2473
DOI - 10.20965/jdr.2014.p0176
Subject(s) - emergency management , preparedness , agency (philosophy) , disaster response , civil defense , knowledge management , literacy , computer science , public relations , business , engineering , psychology , political science , sociology , pedagogy , law , social science
The concept we propose for a disaster management literacy hub (DMLH) involves systemizing and generalizing disaster management literacy (DML) and discussing how to design such a DMLH where the general public and disaster responders share materials on DML. In the early 21st century, measures against large-scale earthquakes should essentially include both hardware disaster mitigation measures like the construction of appropriate structures and software measures like disaster preparedness among people and organizations such as the general public, disaster responders and related organizations. We define knowledge about disaster response management and competency as DML. Our analysis of documents on the incident command system (ICS), an emergency response system under the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), found 56 positions of disaster responders in ICS defined by 35 actions required for four types of disaster response competency. The above analysis led us to propose that DML consist of three elements: knowledge for learning about disaster management and mitigation, skills required for effective disaster response, and basic competency and attitudes for coping with disasters. For conceptual DMLH design based on the Instructional Design (ID), we propose three types of learning: 1 The general public and disaster responders learn audiovisually using training videos and materials and review tests on learn from videos.

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