Les dimensions spatiales et territoriales de la gestion de crise à Lima

Geography does not really address the issue of the management of a major crisis in an urban area, such as that could cause an earthquake and / or a large magnitude tsunami in Lima. Therefore the PACIVUR research team from the IRD, in the framework of the SIRAD project has assumed that the management...

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Auteurs principaux: Robert D’Ercole, Sébastien Hardy, Pascale Metzger, Jérémy Robert, Pauline Gluski
Format: article
Langue:FR
Publié: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2012
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Accès en ligne:https://doaj.org/article/e5a74a50eccc404ea587bb7a6bbfdd3e
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Résumé:Geography does not really address the issue of the management of a major crisis in an urban area, such as that could cause an earthquake and / or a large magnitude tsunami in Lima. Therefore the PACIVUR research team from the IRD, in the framework of the SIRAD project has assumed that the management of a crisis in a territory consisted in making, in terms of space and territory, a connection between areas affected by the disaster and areas that have the resources that will help the first. From this assumption, research conducted in Lima was to build a geo-referenced database about the resources for crisis management, and to analyze their vulnerability and their distribution in the territory in relation to the location of the most vulnerable areas (which will potentially need help). This approach allows identifying critical areas at the time of an emergency situation, and revealing the vulnerability of the crisis management system.