PADM 5733

PADM 5733

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2023-2024.

This is an Executive Master of Public Administration (EMPA) course designed to prepare leaders and develop an understanding of problems and trends in disaster policy, recovery, planning, and management. These concepts can translate to manage for the unexpected and equitably invest in building community capacity. This course focuses on the challenges leaders face working with vulnerable communities and how to build capacity and resilience. Students will learn about climate change, as well as the fields of vulnerability, resilience, and adaptation. The class will think through likely outcomes of innovative policy interventions and discuss risk and pathways for evaluative decisions about hazards. What is a disaster, and how do disasters impact communities, governments, and organizations? What makes people vulnerable, and how to build their resilience to facilitate recovery and adaptation? How does climate change contribute to disasters?

When Offered Summer.

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: EMPA students.

Outcomes
  • Students will describe key themes in disaster prevention, planning, recovery, adaptation, and climate-related disasters.
  • Students will identify what makes communities vulnerable, and how to build their resilience to facilitate recovery.
  • Students will evaluate policy interventions, identify risks/hazards, and tools for decision-making.
  • Students will identify obstacles leaders face in disaster planning, including key political, financial, and technical concerns.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session. 

  • 1 Credit Graded

  •  1636 PADM 5733   LEC 001

    • MTWRF
    • Aug 5 - Aug 9, 2024
    • Brenner, R

  • Instruction Mode: In Person