McCool Stephen F, Burchfield James A, Williams Daniel R, Carroll Matthew S
College of Forestry and Conservation, The University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812, USA.
Environ Manage. 2006 Apr;37(4):437-50. doi: 10.1007/s00267-005-0054-0.
Public concern over the consequences of forest fire to wildland interface communities has led to increased resources devoted to fire suppression, fuel treatment, and management of fire events. The social consequences of the decisions involved in these and other fire-related actions are largely unknown, except in an anecdotal sense, but do occur at a variety of temporal and social organizational scales. These consequences are not limited to the fire event itself. Preparation for the possibility of a fire, actions that suppression agencies take during a fire, and postfire decisions all have consequences, if unknown currently. This article presents an "event-based" approach that can be useful for constructing and systematic discussion about the consequences of wildland fire to human communities. For each of the three major periods within this approach, agencies, communities, and individuals make decisions and take actions that have consequences. The article presents an integrated, temporally based process for examining these consequences, which is similar to others developed in the natural hazards and disaster management literature.
公众对森林火灾对野地与居民区交界处社区造成的后果的关注,已导致投入更多资源用于灭火、燃料处理以及火灾事件管理。除了一些传闻之外,这些以及其他与火灾相关行动所涉及决策的社会后果在很大程度上尚不为人所知,但确实会在各种时间和社会组织层面发生。这些后果并不局限于火灾事件本身。对火灾可能性的准备、灭火机构在火灾期间采取的行动以及火灾后的决策,即便目前尚不清楚,也都会产生后果。本文提出一种“基于事件”的方法,该方法有助于构建并系统地讨论野地火灾对人类社区的后果。在这种方法所包含的三个主要阶段中,各机构、社区和个人都会做出决策并采取行动,而这些决策和行动都会产生后果。本文提出了一个基于时间的综合流程来审视这些后果,这与自然灾害和灾害管理文献中所提出的其他流程类似。