scholarly journals Disaster Recovery Practices and Resilience Building in Greece

Urban Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Harry Coccossis ◽  
Pavlos-Marinos Delladetsimas ◽  
Xenia Katsigianni

This paper aims to elaborate on the notion of resilience by analysing the historical long-term impact of recovery processes that follow catastrophic events. In this respect, the approach reveals the importance of two major dimensions of disaster recovery practices: the establishment of an effective resilience milieu in conjunction with the generation of safety knowledge. The analysis focuses on two island case studies in Greece that experienced devastating earthquakes in the 1950s: Cephalonia (Ionian Sea) and Santorini (South Aegean Sea). Both insular cases underwent a comprehensive and (in many respects) innovative reconstruction process that set the scene for establishing a ‘resilience milieu’ and, in a dialectical manner, a ‘safety culture’, which for many years has been embedded in local development trajectories and influenced spatial growth dynamics.

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. e25812
Author(s):  
Jeff Gerbracht ◽  
Steve Kelling

Managing digital data for long-term archival and disaster recovery is a key component of our collective responsibility in managing digital data and metadata. As more and more data are collected digitally and as the metadata for traditional museum collections becomes both digitized and more comprehensive, the need to ensure that these data are safe and accessible in the long term becomes essential. Unfortunately, disasters do occur and many irreplaceable datasets on biodiversity have been permanently lost. Maintaining a long-term archive and putting in place reliable disaster recovery processes can be prohibitively expensive, both in the cost of hardware and software as well as the costs of personnel to manage and maintain an archival system. Traditionally, storing digital data for the long term and ensuring the data are loss-less, safe and completely recoverable when a disaster occurs has been managed on-premises with a combination of on-site and off-site storage. This requires complex data workflows to ensure that all data are securely and redundantly stored in multiple highly dispersed locations to minimize the threat of data loss due to local or regional disasters. Files are often moved multiple times across operating systems and media types on their way to and from a deep archive, increasing the risk of file integrity issues. With the recent advent of an array of Cloud Services from organizations such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google to more focused offerings from Iron Mountain, Atempo and others, we have a number of options for long term archival of digital data. Deep archive solutions, storage where retrieval expected only in the case of a disaster, are offered by many of these organizations at a rate substantially less than their normal data storage fees. The most basic requirement for an archival system is storing multiple replicates of the data in geographically isolated locations with a mechanism for guaranteeing file integrity, usually using a checksum algorithm. Additional components that are integral to a robust archive include a simple metadata search and reliable retrieval. In this presentation, we’ll discuss the need for long term archive and disaster recovery capabilities, detail the current best practices of data archival systems and review a variety of archival options that have become available with Cloud Services.


Crisis ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 220-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Stack

Abstract. Background: There has been no systematic work on the short- or long-term impact of the installation of crisis phones on suicides from bridges. The present study addresses this issue. Method: Data refer to 219 suicides from 1954 through 2013 on the Skyway Bridge in St. Petersburg, Florida. Six crisis phones with signs were installed in July 1999. Results: In the first decade after installation, the phones were used by 27 suicidal persons and credited with preventing 26 or 2.6 suicides a year. However, the net suicide count increased from 48 in the 13 years before installation of phones to 106 the following 13 years or by 4.5 additional suicides/year (t =3.512, p < .001). Conclusion: Although the phones prevented some suicides, there was a net increase after installation. The findings are interpreted with reference to suggestion/contagion effects including the emergence of a controversial bridge suicide blog.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenna L. Claes ◽  
Sean S. Hankins ◽  
J. K. Ford
Keyword(s):  

Diabetes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 966-P
Author(s):  
ATSUSHI FUJIYA ◽  
TOSHIKI KIYOSE ◽  
TAIGA SHIBATA ◽  
HIROSHI SOBAJIMA

Author(s):  
Xun Yuan ◽  
Andreas Mitsis ◽  
Thomas Semple ◽  
Michael Rubens ◽  
Christoph A. Nienaber

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