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The Next Generation of Disaster Recovery Guidance

by admin | Jan 12, 2015 | Climate, Disaster, Disaster policy, Resilience, Urban Planning

It is always an honor to be able to lead an effort that advances the state of practice with regard to a subject as critical to the nation, and the world, as planning for post-disaster recovery. As readers will have noted from this blog and website, for the last four...

Holiday Promises

by admin | Dec 23, 2014 | Blogging, Climate, Government, Political philosophy, Urban Planning, Writing

The holiday season is upon us, and despite having a modicum of free time that I have not enjoyed for a while, I confess—I am still struggling to compose as much material for this blog as I would prefer. But I am working on it, on some serious material on a variety of...

Interview with Boulder, Colorado, Mayor

by admin | Dec 15, 2014 | Blogging, Climate, Disaster, Disaster policy, Public safety, Resilience, Urban Planning

This is one of those short posts that takes you to a different blog, but one for which I have direct responsibilities–the Recovery News blog at the American Planning Association website. We posted last Friday a video interview with Matthew Appelbaum, the mayor...

Random Thoughts on the People’s Climate March

by admin | Sep 25, 2014 | Activism, Books, Climate, Disaster policy, Environment, Government, Science

Reportedly, about 400,000 people attended the People’s Climate March in New York City last weekend. I was not one of them, but that is not because I don’t support their objectives. I had planned to be in Iowa City, and will discuss that visit in an upcoming blog to...

Digital Coast: A Model for Progress

by admin | Sep 1, 2014 | Books, Climate, Environment, Government, Political philosophy, Science, Urban Planning

In an era of congressional gridlock, with so little productive activity coming out of Washington that many people have begun to wonder if federal government is good for anything, the best models often work quietly in the shadows—and they may not even work primarily...
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