Natural Hazards Review
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Current Issue

November 2009

 

All Online Issues

February 2000  - November 2009

 

News

 

 
  • New online manuscript and tracking system launched! Authors can submit manuscripts to Natural Hazards Review via the Internet and have their manuscripts reviewed online. We encourage authors to log onto http://jrnnheng.edmgr.com to view the Author's Tutorial, and become familiar with the submission requirements and steps to follow when submitting a new manuscript.
  • American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) and Copyright Clearance Center have partnered to
    provide a web-based permission service using
    Rightslink(r). This service offers users the oppor-
    tunity to obtain permission to reuse ASCE-
    copyrighted materials quickly, easily, and legally.
    For more information, click http://pubs.asce.org/permissions/requests/

Publication Information

Natural Hazards Review cover

Co-Editors

James E. Beavers, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, University of Tennessee
Kathleen Tierney, Ph.D., Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado, Boulder

Frequency

Quarterly

The Natural Hazards Review stands on the realization that natural disaster losses result from interactions between the physical world, the constructed environment, and the character of the societies and people who occupy them. The journal is dedicated to bringing together the physical, social, and behavioral sciences; engineering; and the regulatory and policy environments to provide a forum for cutting edge, holistic, and cross-disciplinary approaches to natural hazards loss and cost reduction. The journal offers a means for researchers and practitioners working together to publish the results of truly interdisciplinary and partnered approaches to loss reduction and long-term disaster resiliency. Engineering topics covered include the characterization of hazard forces and the planning, design, construction, maintenance, performance and use of structures in the physical environment. Social and behavioral sciences topics addressed include a range of issues related to hazard mitigation and human response as well as significant issues related to the built environment such as land use, building standards, and the role of financial markets and insurance. The specific physical science topics covered include those pertinent to understanding the hazardous character of the world and the performance of the structures that we build to accommodate our way of life. More importantly, the journal features papers co-authored by people from a variety of specializations who bring a cross-disciplinary perspective to the complex factors that contribute to disasters in today's-and especially tomorrow's-world. ISSN: 1527-6988

 
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