Author_Institution :
US Geol. Survey, Reston, VA, USA
Abstract :
Continuing efforts under the auspices of the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program are under way to improve earthquake risk assessment and risk management in earthquake-prone regions of Alaska, California, Nevada, Washington, Oregon, Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, and Idaho, the New Madrid and Wabash Valley seismic zones in the central United States, the southeastern and northeastern United States, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Guam, and Hawaii. Geologists, geophysicists, seismologists, architects, engineers, urban planners, emergency managers, health care specialists, and policymakers are having to work at the margins of their disciplines to bridge the gap between research and practice and to provide a social, technical, administrative, political, legal, and economic basis for changing public policies and professional practices in communities where the earthquake risk is unacceptable
Keywords :
earthquakes; risk management; Alaska; Arizona; California; Guam; Hawaii; Idaho; National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program; Nevada; New Madrid seismic zone; Oregon; Puerto Rico; United States; Utah; Virgin Islands; Wabash Valley seismic zone; Washington; Wyoming; administrative issues; central United States; earthquake risk assessment improvement; earthquake risk reduction; earthquake-prone regions; economic issues; legal issues; northeastern United States; political issues; professional practices; public policies; research; social issues; southeastern United States; technical issues; Bridges; Disaster management; Earthquake engineering; Engineering management; Geology; Hazards; Law; Medical services; Risk management; Seismology;