//--> //--> //--> //-->
Toggle navigation
Logout
Change account settings
EN
DE
ES
FR
A-Z
Beta
About EconBiz
News
Thesaurus (STW)
Research Skills
Help
EN
DE
ES
FR
My account
Logout
Change account settings
Login
Publications
Events
Your search terms
Search
Retain my current filters
~subject:"9th"
Search options
All Fields
Title
Exact title
Subject
Author
Institution
ISBN/ISSN
Published in...
Publisher
Open Access only
Advanced
Search history
My EconBiz
Favorites
Loans
Reservations
Fines
You are here:
Home
Assessing the Midwest flood
Similar by subject
Narrow search
Delete all filters
| 1 applied filter
Year of publication
From:
To:
Subject
All
9th
Floods
172
floods
130
Überschwemmung
82
Flood
81
Disaster
47
Katastrophe
46
Climate change
38
Klimawandel
31
natural disasters
29
Natural disasters
27
United States of America
22
climate change
22
Welt
21
World
21
Risk management
19
Philippines
16
Drought
15
Elementarschadenversicherung
15
Natural disaster insurance
15
Risk
15
earthquakes
14
Disaster damage
13
Dürre
13
Katastrophenschaden
13
India
12
Disasters
11
Droughts
11
Federal Reserve District
11
Humanitarian aid
11
Humanitäre Hilfe
11
disasters
11
Risikomanagement
10
Vulnerability
10
droughts
10
Public policy
9
Scheduling problem
9
Scheduling-Verfahren
9
storms
9
Earthquake
8
more ...
less ...
Online availability
All
Free
11
Type of publication
All
Article
11
Language
All
Undetermined
11
Author
All
Clement, Douglas
7
Davies, Phil
3
Lotterman, Edward
1
Published in...
All
Fedgazette
11
Source
All
RePEc
11
Showing
1
-
10
of
11
Sort
relevance
articles prioritized
date (newest first)
date (oldest first)
1
The failure of flood control
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Sep
,
pp. 2-3
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005411052
Saved in:
2
Dam it all: Dams and levees are the usual answer to flooding, but they're not always the right answer. So why do we keep building them?
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Sep
,
pp. 4-5
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005411081
Saved in:
3
Who needs downtowns, anyway?
Davies, Phil
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2006
)
Sep
,
pp. 8-8
Were historic business districts worth saving? City leaders thought so.
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005411153
Saved in:
4
To save a city
Davies, Phil
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2006
)
Sep
,
pp. 7-10
How far should government power extend into private markets in the wake of a disaster?
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005411174
Saved in:
5
Back to nature: restoring wetlands may help to control
floods
, but their other values complicate the picture
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Nov
,
pp. 12-13
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005519177
Saved in:
6
Fighting the last war: current policy neglects to anticipate the impact of floodplain development on future flood potential
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Nov
,
pp. 11-11
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005519181
Saved in:
7
Out of harm's way: the new wave in flood control is getting rid of the problem: us
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Sep
,
pp. 6-7
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005519256
Saved in:
8
Subsidizing sorrow
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Sep
,
pp. 1-1
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005519260
Saved in:
9
After the flood: flood insurance and wetlands restoration are two policies that hold both promise and problems for flood control. Will they be able to handle the next disaster?
Clement, Douglas
- In:
Fedgazette
(
2001
)
Nov
,
pp. 8-11
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005724404
Saved in:
10
Receding flood waters reveal huge damage assessment; total bill will exceed $1 billion; infrastructure costs will hang on for years
Lotterman, Edward
- In:
Fedgazette
(
1997
)
Apr
,
pp. 1-1
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005724456
Saved in:
1
2
Next
Last
Results per page
10
25
50
100
250
A service of the
zbw
×
Loading...
//-->