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Journal Article

Citation

Batho S, Russell L, Williams G. Disasters 1999; 23(3): 217-233.

Affiliation

Department of Planning and Landscape, University of Manchester.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10509056

Abstract

Fuelled by terrorist attacks on urban areas, emergency planning responses to manmade disasters is a growing area of critical debate within the field of urban management. The response of a major British city--Manchester--to the 1996 bombing of its commercial core, is examined in this paper. It focuses on the transformation of the emergency planning response from dealing with the immediate crisis during the first week, to a stage of controlled recovery that still continues. The response to the devastation caused by the bomb was co-ordinated by the city council, which developed a range of short- and long-term initiatives, but the re-opening of the city centre could not have happened so quickly had the council not worked in collaboration with other key organisations and agencies. Working partnerships were crucial to the immediate response and subsequent recovery, with such capacity for organisational learning built upon existing co-operative arrangements within the city, which had developed over the previous decade.


Language: en

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