2014
DOI: 10.1111/disa.12118
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Disaster risk insurance and catastrophe models in risk‐prone small Caribbean islands

Abstract: Post-catastrophe recovery and financial liquidity have long challenged small Caribbean islands. These states are vulnerable to multifarious natural hazards that often cause considerable socioeconomic dislocation. Such events inflict heavy losses on businesses and households, and significantly disrupt all aspects of government operations. After Hurricane Ivan devastated the economies of some islands in September 2004-with estimated losses of as much as 200 per cent of gross domestic product in some cases-region… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Natural disasters, including hurricanes and earthquakes, have been shown to be particularly challenging for islands, such as the Caribbean islands, as they face unique challenges attributable to their geographic location. 20 Thirty days after Hurricane Maria, 85 percent of the island's population still remained without power, water, and methods of communication, especially in the rural areas. Despite the presence of the US military, National Guard, and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on the island, many residents of mountainous regions continued to be trapped inside their remote, isolated communities or remained in emergency refugee camps.…”
Section: Methods Phds Design and Question Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Natural disasters, including hurricanes and earthquakes, have been shown to be particularly challenging for islands, such as the Caribbean islands, as they face unique challenges attributable to their geographic location. 20 Thirty days after Hurricane Maria, 85 percent of the island's population still remained without power, water, and methods of communication, especially in the rural areas. Despite the presence of the US military, National Guard, and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on the island, many residents of mountainous regions continued to be trapped inside their remote, isolated communities or remained in emergency refugee camps.…”
Section: Methods Phds Design and Question Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Validated Spanish versions are imperative to accurately assess the psychological distress and trauma severity in Spanish-speaking populations residing in the proximity of the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea, which are geographically prone to hurricanes and tropical storms. 20,21 The aim of the present study is the construction and validation of a modern and socially relevant survey research tool to identify both acute and prolonged trauma and stressors suffered by people, both during and after a natural disaster. Whereas the TESS was originally developed as an instrument to measure the degree of exposure to an earthquake disaster, the Post-Hurricane Distress Scale (PHDS) questionnaire was designed using the TESS as a starting point and then adding hurricane-relevant stressors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At a global scale, natural disaster financing or insurance mechanisms are in big need of datasets for risk assessment, especially for developing countries where organized, systematic data collection cannot always be guaranteed due to lack of resources or structural issues (see [ 3 , 4 , 5 ]). In particular, the activation of rapid post-event financial protection needs quick and ready-to-implement response to natural hazards.…”
Section: General Context: Global Exposure Data For Risk Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multifarious natural hazards cause socio economic dislocation and lead to heavy losses disrupting government operations. Catastrophe insurance schemes are still not popular as there are reservations regarding their efficacy (Joyette et al, 2015). Following serious floods in late 1981, the French government established a single compensation scheme for those who are victims of natural disasters called Cat Nat.…”
Section: Sovereign Risk Transfer (Baur and Parker 2015)mentioning
confidence: 99%