Description
Resilience in the Caribbean is a forward-looking exploration of how a region long shaped by adversity can transform crisis into opportunity. As climate change accelerates the frequency and intensity of hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, and droughts, disasters are no longer isolated events, they are part of everyday reality. Yet this book argues that the Caribbean’s story is not one of vulnerability, but of enduring strength and adaptation.
Moving beyond traditional disaster response, Resilience in the Caribbean presents a comprehensive, integrated framework for modern emergency management. It weaves together culture, community capacity, micro-economics, governance, technology, and long-term national and regional planning to reimagine resilience as a living system, one built from the ground up and sustained across generations.
Grounded in Caribbean realities and informed by global best practices, the book challenges governments, institutions, and communities to rethink preparedness, recovery, and development as a single, unified mission. It is both a strategic guide and a call to action for building societies that do not merely survive disasters but emerge stronger, more equitable, and more self-determined.

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