Disaster risk is described as “the probable damage of life, injury, or demolished or spoiled properties that might happen to a network, organization, or a communal in a particular time, influenced probabilistically as a role of hazard, exposure, vulnerability, and ability, " while economic recovery program is a means by which a community advances and competently executes its ability to engross an early tremor using extenuation and to counter-react and acclimatize subsequently so as to preserve activities and fasten rehabilitation and again to be in an improved situation to lessen fatalities from upcoming disasters. No organized examination has been endeavored to comprehend disaster economic vulnerability and recovery programs in Tanzania; thus there is knowledge gap in this area. It is for this reason that this section documents and shares knowledge on disaster economic vulnerability and recovery programs using Tanzania as a case under investigation. The development of this section was founded on the hypothetical and ancient work study. To ensure an extensive hypothetical and experiential foundation for this work, desk review has been carried out to gather information from numerous secondary bases. This comprised reports and project papers and registrations. Secondary databases have been gotten from writings regarding disaster, economic vulnerability, and recovery programs. Furthermore the desk review reviewed reputable journals related to the discipline. Finally, the information gathered were scrutinized, polished, and modified to match the requirement of this article. Concepts and frameworks on tragedy economic susceptibility and repossession agendas as well as indices that are used to measure susceptibility and pliability to natural threats are also offered; this is shadowed by econometric model: influences and measures of economic susceptibility. The chapter also illustrates disaster economic vulnerability and retrieval programs experience from Tanzania whereby efforts that have been made so far and economic recovering program, namely, macroeconomic stability, microeconomic market efficiency, governance, and social development, have been presented.
CITATION STYLE
Kumburu, N. P. (2022). Disaster Economic Vulnerability and Recovery Programs Experience from Tanzania. In Disaster Risk Reduction for Resilience: Disaster Economic Vulnerability and Recovery Programs (pp. 45–70). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-08325-9_3
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