Login

Forgotten your details?

« Back to previous page

Frequency of Man-Made Disasters in the 20th Century

30 January 2007

Research by Les Coleman of Department of Finance, The University of Melbourne analyses two disaster databases maintained by the Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters and by Emergency Management Australia

The objective is to quantify the frequency, nature and changes in man-made disasters in industrialised countries during the past century. The analysis shows an exponential growth in disaster frequency, largely due to an increase in traditional hazards such as fires and explosions, rather than from new technologies.

Although the number of incidents has grown, this has been offset by a decline in fatalities per incident. An important implication of these results is that regulatory oversight and internal corporate governance processes are inadequate to ensure effective management of modern industrial risks. Frequency of Man-Made Disasters in the 20th Century, Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management

Latest News

New US Navy intel tool checks Philippines terroris… More…
09 February 2012

UK cyber security skills inadequate… More…
08 February 2012

Utilities warned again about IT vulnerability… More…
08 February 2012

Food and beverage industry top target for cyber cr… More…
07 February 2012

RSS Feed symbol | What is RSS?
View all news items…

Latest Events

13-14 February, 2012
Business Continuity and Emerge…
Location: Abu Dhabi, UAE

14-17 February, 2012
Security and Safety Technologi…
Location: Moscow, Russia

19-21 February, 2012
ASIS International 3rd Middle …
Location: Dubai, UAE

View all events…

Key Articles

The role of accurate mapping in disaster managemen… More…
07 February 2012

What's in your bin… More…
06 February 2012

Shropshire Council enhances CCTV for environmental… More…
06 February 2012

How to spot the cloud's pitfalls… More…
06 February 2012

RSS Feed symbol | What is RSS?
View all articles…


Design: Burnthebook