Documents and publications

Explore a comprehensive collection of publications, reports, and documents that focus on disaster risk and resilience.

These resources offer insights, best practices, and research aimed at mitigating the impact of disasters. Whether you're seeking the latest research, policy recommendations, or case studies, this library supports knowledge sharing and informed decision-making in building safer, more resilient communities.

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Documents and publications
This study investigates whether there is a relationship between the persistence of atmospheric circulation patterns in the Euro-Atlantic sector and forecast skill for temperatures and temperature extremes in Europe.
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Documents and publications
This study is assessing the role of anthropogenic climate change in the occurrence of prolonged extreme climate conditions favourable for the development of summer 2022 Landes wildfires.
Cover and source: International Institute for Sustainable Development
Documents and publications
This summary report covers the 9th Africa Regional Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction (AfRP-9) held on the theme of “Act Now for the Resilient Africa We Want" in Windhoek between 21 to 24 October 2024.
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Documents and publications
Based on insights gained from the first two years of CCDR publications, this note identifies five channels through which the reports can support policy formulation and investment prioritization, or inform projects and programs.
Cover and sourc: International Journal of Disaster Risk Science
Documents and publications
This study aims to clarify the differences in the estimation of casualties from a significant earthquake and tsunami event between an agent-based model (ABM) and a simplified approach.
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Documents and publications
Austrian citizens perceive extreme weather events as their top disaster risk. While they trust public authorities, they find disaster information hard to access and rely on social media. Despite this, they've been more prepared than other Europeans.
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Documents and publications
Dutch citizens consider extreme weather as priority. They are well-informed generally, trust public authorities and feel less need for more information. However, they adopt fewer and imbalanced preparedness measures than the EU average.
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Documents and publications
Polish citizens see extreme weather risk as top priority, have average awareness and trust in authorities. Despite easy access to info, they take fewer preparedness measures than average, indicating a need for greater engagement in disaster preparedness.

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