What is the HRRC?
Background
The Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center (HRRC) was established at Texas
A&M
University in 1988. HRRC researchers focus on hazard analysis, emergency
preparedness and response, disaster recovery, and hazard mitigation. Researchers
study the full range of natural disasters and technological hazards. Natural
disasters include floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes and droughts,
while technological hazards may involve chemical plant accidents, transportation
accidents, hazardous materials and lifeline failures. The Hazard Reduction & Recovery Center is one of only two United Nations (UN-OCHA) Collaborative Centers
in the world. The center serves OCHA as a research and consultant agency
with particular emphasis on national disaster plans and their implications
for future development. The center engages in research on hazard and disaster
mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. The staff of the HRRC
is interdisciplinary in nature and includes the expertise of architects,
planners, sociologists, policy analysts, and engineers. Dr. Dennis Wenger
is the founding Director, and Dr. Walter Peacock has been the Director
since 2004.
Mission Statement
As a United Nations Collaborative Centre, the Hazard Reduction & Recovery
Center (HRRC) has the following mission:
- To increase our understanding of the nature and impact of natural
and technological hazards upon humans and the physical and built environment
in which they live, and to increase our knowledge regarding hazard mitigation,
preparedness, response and recovery.
- To enlarge the hazard research community through graduate student training,
faculty development, and educational endeavors.
- To disseminate research findings to the research community and to
practitioners so they can use this information to mitigate, prepare
for, respond to,
and recover from disasters.
- To provide assistance and consultation to those state, national
and international agencies charged with responsibility for hazard
analysis,
emergency preparedness
and response, disaster recovery, and hazard mitigation.
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