Engage Magazine Feature: EMHS Conducts Research in Disaster Areas, Provides Experiential Learning Opportunities - College of Social Sciences & Public Policy (2024)

The following article is a featured story in the College of Social Sciences and Public Policy’s annual magazine, Engage. To read the full 2021-2022 issue of Engage,click here.

Engage Magazine Feature: EMHS Conducts Research in Disaster Areas, Provides Experiential Learning Opportunities - College of Social Sciences & Public Policy (1)

The Disaster Incident Research Team (DIRT), housed within the Emergency Management and Homeland Security Program (EMHS), was formed in 2012 to effectively conduct research in disaster areas and provide students with experiential learning opportunities, which is often a challenge in disaster management.

“DIRT is a unique program that allows FSU to directly support emergency management in Florida during a disaster by being part of the response and recovery process,” said EMHS Director David Merrick. “This experience is crucial to our students, as it allows them to see how things work in the field before they graduate. This ongoing process also keeps our classroom offerings fresh, continually updated with the current methods and trends in disaster management.”

In recent years, much of DIRT’s efforts have revolved around remote sensing and unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in disasters.

The team deployed to Bay County and Mexico Beach during Hurricane Michael in 2018, as well as to the Champlain South Tower condominium collapse in Surfside in 2021. These deployments resulted in groundbreaking process improvements in damage assessments and urban search and rescue.

“I was there for the first 14 days of the [Surfside] response,” said Austin Bush, a doctoral student studying geography. “For those two weeks, I was flying UAS seemingly every other hour over the collapsed site making 3D maps, and we were able to provide Incident Command with extremely valuable information. This was my first disaster response where I truly felt that I was an integral component to a part of the response.”

Bush has served as a UAS pilot with DIRT since the summer of 2019 and is the supervisor of the internal student-led Incident Management Team. His research interests in geography frequently overlap with DIRT projects. “The majority of my work with DIRT has involved piloting UAS, with an emphasis on the development of 3D mapping techniques that are suitable for disaster management,” Bush said. “This has allowed me to be involved in a wide range of disaster-related projects, such as mapping farms for emergency management in Puerto Rico and Jamaica, to 3D modeling collapsed structures in Surfside, Florida.”

After completing his Ph.D., Bush plans to continue to pursue opportunities related to UAS and public safety. “When I first started working as a member of DIRT, I was significantly less confident in my professional abilities related to this type of work (UAS and Disaster Response). However, as I have been able to experience more events and learn about the profession, I have developed confidence in this skill set and plan to pursue a career based around it,” Bush said. “Working as a member of DIRT has not only helped me develop as a young professional in emergency management, but more importantly it has helped me grow as a person. It has provided me with opportunities to not only learn about emergency management, but to also get out of my comfort zone, work on my leadership skills, practice public speaking, and learn about project management.”

Laura Hart has been working with DIRT since 2015 when she was an M.P.A. student. Since 2017, Hart has been a full-time staff member with DIRT and course instructor while working on her Ph.D. in Public Administration. Her research focuses on UAS policies and issues surrounding complex emergency management and emotional labor.

“Over the years, I have worked primarily as a UAS pilot within DIRT,” Hart said. “However, I have specific interests in community fieldwork and research and have had the opportunity to travel throughout the Caribbean and the United States while gathering valuable experience.
I have been either deployed or activated for countless hurricanes, tropical storms, missing persons investigations, FSU football games, and a volcano.”

When recounting her most memorable experience with DIRT, Hart commented on the Kilauea volcanic eruption in 2018. “We flew unmanned aircraft systems over the rifts and tracked the rate of volcanic flow. I had never seen an actively erupting volcano before; it was one of the most surreal experiences of my life, especially at 3 a.m.”

Hart hopes to become a teaching professor after completing her Ph.D. “I greatly enjoy teaching and discussing different perspectives in the classroom. My field experience has been pivotal in developing compelling and accurate course content, as combined with theory,” Hart shared. “I’m grateful for the opportunities DIRT has provided to me both as a student and as a staff member. I have had the opportunity to learn a great deal about both emergency management and remote sensing within the public sector.”

Achievements in remote sensing in the field have led to the creation of a new lab at FSU, the Disaster Intelligence Analysis Laboratory. This lab is designed to advance the work begun by DIRT focused on intelligence gathered during a disaster, including open source (social media) and geospatial (remote sensing) information. These methods and processes will support decision-making and situational awareness for emergency management and public safety in Tallahassee and around the state.

DIRT deploys students at all levels in their academic careers, from undergraduate to doctoral, providing students with a unique opportunity to conduct a wide variety of research during and after disasters.

To learn more about DIRT and the EMHS program, visit em.fsu.edu.

Engage Magazine Feature: EMHS Conducts Research in Disaster Areas, Provides Experiential Learning Opportunities - College of Social Sciences & Public Policy (2024)

FAQs

Why is field based research important for disaster policy and disaster management? ›

Knowledge based on systematically collected data from field disaster research studies might help planners avoid common disaster management pitfalls, thereby improving disaster response planning.

What is the significance of conducting a research study on disaster preparedness and risk reduction management? ›

To identify the factors contributing to the vulnerability of the community to various disaster risks. To suggest specific measures for incorporating in the preparedness plan in response to various disaster risks.

What are the ethical considerations in disaster research? ›

Ethical practices around informed consent, privacy, confidentiality, cultural sensitivity, and researcher and participant distress must be carefully considered and planned for, given the chaotic nature of post-disaster environments.

What is the concept of disaster research? ›

The overarching goal of disaster research is to decrease the risk that a hazard will cause an event and, should an event occur, that it does not result in a disaster. To prevent or modify the converting of a natural hazard into an event is mostly not possible.

Why is it important to study disaster and environmental management? ›

There is a need for comprehensive planning for disaster risk management because disasters can have devastating impacts on communities, economies, and the environment. Without proper planning, disasters can result in significant loss of life, property damage, and economic disruption.

What is the importance of disaster management policies? ›

Disaster management plans provide organizations with a set of procedures to follow in the event of a crisis or emergency event. A focus is put on minimizing the long term impacts an event may have on business operations, and reducing the impact of disruptions on the business' longevity and profitability.

What is the importance of studying disaster risk reduction management and awareness? ›

Natural hazards (such as extreme weather, wildfires or earthquakes) may be inevitable, but disasters – with loss of life and high economic costs – are not. This is why disaster risk reduction is important. It lowers the probability that a hazard or man-made event has disastrous consequences.

Why is it important to study disaster and disaster risks? ›

Identifying, assessing and understanding disaster risk is critical to reducing it. We can measure disaster risk by analysing trends of, for instance, previous disaster losses. These trends can help us to gauge whether disaster risk reduction is being effective.

What are the concepts of disaster management? ›

Specifically, disaster management is about organizing and directing resources to cope with a disaster and coordinating the roles and responsibilities of responders, private sector organizations, public sector agencies, nonprofit and faith-based organizations, volunteers, donations, etc.

What are the ethical principles of disaster management? ›

Ethical principles include the Duty to maximize the greatest number of lives (utilitarianism), the Duty to do no harm (beneficence), the Duty to provide care to all - Justice. 1.

What are the ethical issues in disaster medicine? ›

Important ethical concerns include fair distribution of limited resources and limiting harm. Patients with kidney disease, their care-givers, health-care providers and authorities should be trained to respond to the medical and logistical problems that occur during disasters to improve outcomes.

What are the five considerations when conducting ethical research? ›

These principles include voluntary participation, informed consent, anonymity, confidentiality, potential for harm, and results communication.

What is the role of research in disaster management? ›

The foundation of disaster research lies in understanding the causes and impacts of various types of disasters. This quest for knowledge has led to significant advancements in risk assessment and mitigation strategies. Consider, for example, the seismic research conducted in earthquake-prone regions.

What is the importance of research on emergencies? ›

The ability to access, collect, and analyse data to predict and respond to crises is crucial for effective emergency management processes.

What is the key concept of disaster? ›

Disaster is a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society at any scale due to hazardous events interacting with conditions of exposure, vulnerability and capacity, leading to one or more of the following: human, material, economic and environmental losses and impacts.

Why is it important to study disaster risk reduction and management? ›

And disaster risk management is not just for the public sector. It belongs in the toolbox of organizations everywhere. By managing disaster risk alongside all types of risk, companies reduce uncertainty, limit their losses, secure business continuity and build resilience.

What is the importance of disaster management studies? ›

Disaster management can help to enhance the ability of emergency responders to save lives. When appropriate infrastructure is set up and training is completed to improve disaster response, communities can survive the stress and distress caused by disasters.

Why is it important in disaster work to work as teams with professionals from different fields? ›

To facilitate disaster relief through inter-professional collaboration, it is necessary for many different organizations to understand each other's capabilities in the event of a disaster, methods to share problems, needs, and information among them and with new members, and the importance of local coordinators.

Why is disaster management framework important? ›

Why Is a Disaster Management Framework Necessary? For organizations that value their longevity, disaster management is a vital precautionary measure. An investment in disaster management is essential in reducing vulnerability, lessening losses, for convalescence as a result of disasters, and protecting assets.

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