Long-Term Global Threat Assessment: Challenging New Roles for Emergency Managers
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Abstract
Based on currently available published data and literature from multiple
disciplines, this article examines medium- and long-term global developments and
changes that will likely impact human society in disastrous or even catastrophic
fashion, with significant impact on the roles and challenges of emergency
managers. Some of the phenomena described are loss of fresh water, significant
sea level rise with resultant flooding, increased heat leading to desertification and
crop losses, storms that are both more frequent and more violent, massive food
emergencies as crops fail for lack of water and/or saltwater inundation, loss of the
petroleum-based economy, and massive population relocations on a level the
world has never experienced. The perspective used is purposely global, in that
the trends described do not respect political boundaries, bolstered by the
recognition that mitigation and response activities may well involve many nations
simultaneously. The article concludes with introductory suggestions of steps that
emergency management should take in preparing to serve new and more complex
roles to meet coming challenges.