Emergency! Quarantine, Evacuation, and Back Again

What is the new normal in crisis and disaster management? How has emergency response changed as a result of the pandemic? Why do all emergency plans need to be updated?

We will never go back to old ways in public health, policing, public protests, procurement, politics, and a wide range of other public policy issues. Race relations and interactions with Indigenous communities should never be the same.

Now Available for Order

$49.95 (plus shipping)

Order today and receive well over $100 worth of crisis planning digital downloads:

  • 80 diagrams, checklists, pre-written policies, and press releases to use immediately in your crisis plan
  • Occasional newsletters on crisis and communication topics
  • Precise blogs by authors on their research areas

Total value: $100.00+

We want to keep this book accessible to people who really need its advice. But we also want you to have immediate improvements in your crisis planning and response. That’s why when you order, you will receive digital downloads with a value more than double the cost of the book.

Description

We will never go back to old ways in public health, policing, public protests, procurement, politics, and a wide range of other public policy issues. Race relations and interactions with Indigenous communities should never be the same.

This remarkable group of academics, political leaders, emergency responders, and activists explore these topics in detail:

  • Johns Hopkins’, Alison Abraham
  • Peskotomuhkati Chief, Hugh Akagi
  • Police Inspector, Anil Anand (ret’d)
  • Crisis Manager, Allan Bonner
  • Sovereign Risk Practitioner, Michael R. Jackson-Bonner
  • Emergency Room Physician, Dr. P. Cheah
  • Emergency Management Instructor, Michael Fearon
  • Jamaican Researcher, Leslie Ann Fullerton
  • Diplomat, Randolph Mank
  • Johns Hopkins’, Derek Ng
  • Physician, Dr. Deborah Prabhu
  • Cybersecurity Strategist, Brennen Schmidt
  • Consultant, Robin Sears

This group is addressing the range of challenges we’ve experienced in the pandemic—procurement, health information, lockdowns, risk communication, potential hospital evacuation, Black Lives Matter, Indigenous health and isolation, cancel culture, defunding the police, civil unrest, the crisis in epidemiology, the Justinian and other plagues, best emergency planning practices, trust in leadership, how different jurisdictions managed the pandemic, quarantine in Hong Kong, and many other topics.