Abstract

Construction industry practice is strongly influenced by the culture surrounding its operations and, with the prevailing emphasis on achieving efficiency, there is a strong focus on outcome metrics such as profitability and employee productivity. With the recent increases in natural hazard events worldwide, and the likelihood that this will worsen still further with anticipated climate changes, the industry is increasingly contributing to building resilience within disaster-affected communities. Existing industry expertise, its educational approaches and the related theoretical frameworks, however, all require adjustment if these changing needs are to be fully addressed. Most importantly, an agenda shift is required from the philosophical side and a more pragmatic approach is needed if community resilience goals and objectives are to be met, rather than the narrower focus of the current metrics-driven management system. A synthesis of the current literature is therefore presented, along with relevant case histories illustrating how such an agenda shift within a disaster management context may influence the development of appropriate theory, as well as impacting upon grass-roots educational requirements. The research concludes by discussing how the ‘mainstreaming’ of disaster management within construction industry practice could drive forward developments in theorizing expertise and educational provisions across the constituent disciplines.

Highlights

  • Construction industry practice is strongly influenced by the culture surrounding its operations

  • The research suggests that a ‘unified DM focus’ needs establishing within the CI and this could be the guiding principle for theorizing in the context of DM in the CI. This will, in the longer term, counteract the ‘time pressed agenda’ within construction and will make the industry better prepared for DM

  • The bottom-up approach is suggested to enhance capacity building within construction education

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Summary

Authors Type URL Published Date

Theorizing construction industry practice within a disaster risk reduction setting : is it a panacea or an illusion? MJB Article This version is available at: http://usir.salford.ac.uk/id/eprint/47236/ 2016. USIR is a digital collection of the research output of the University of Salford. Full text material held in the repository is made freely available online and can be read, downloaded and copied for non-commercial private study or research purposes. Please check the manuscript for any further copyright restrictions

Bingunath Ingirige
BINGUNATH INGIRIGE**
Introduction
Risk and vulnerability assessment
Construction industry practice and the desired agenda shift in theorizing
CI Educational Competencies
Construction industry practice and its link to disaster management
Single contractor employed for refurbishment of premises
DM mainstreamed in CI Education
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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