Abstract

One way to assess whether governments (at any level) learn from their disaster experience is to examine two similar events at different points in time. We investigate and compare the 1989 EXXON VALDEZ oil spill disaster with the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil platform and oil spill disaster to ascertain how governmental law and policy, implemented in an intergovernmental realm, has changed or advanced. One goal is to outline what coastal local government officials need to know to ensure sustainability of their jurisdictions in the face of hazard and disaster risk. The study recounts both incidents and recommends intergovernmental analysis informed by the theories of nested sets, distributed cognition, and socio-technical systems.

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