Emergency and disaster management has become a widely researched area in the last decade.
Emergency and disaster management involves four stages: Mitigation (Planning), Preparedness, Response and Relief.
Emergency and disaster management involves four stages: Mitigation (Planning), Preparedness, Response and Relief.
Emergency and disaster management has become a widely researched area in the last decade.
We are in a state of climate emergency.
CSTEP undertook a project to develop a platform that would help model the scale and impact of disasters and provide analysis, tools and exercises to handle it.
This paper introduces a framework to examine the relative effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of different information and communications technologies to deliver a range of social services, using a case example of rural Bangladesh.
Following the Mumbai terror attacks, of November 26, 2008, CSTEP initiated a project on emergency and disaster management in coordination with CAIR (Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics).
Innovations in collection, analyses and visualisation of data are opening new frontiers in the way we understand cities.
The current COVID-19 pandemic is spooling out to be a calamity of unprecedented proportions, causing loss of lives and devastating economies globally.
Power infrastructure, which includes assets for generation, transmission, and distribution of power, is vulnerable to manifestations of climate change.
The Smart Cities Mission was launched in 2015 to enable cities that ensure a decent quality of life.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) sixth assessment report (AR6) of working group 1 — ‘The Physical Science Basis’ has reinforced our worst fears about the state of climate.
Climate change is increasing the risk of occurrence of natural hazard events at different scales and magnitudes across the world.
India is vulnerable, in varying degrees, to multiple disasters.