1
Vale LJ, Campanella TJ. The resilient city: how modern cities recover from disaster. New York: Oxford University Press 2005.
2
Clark P. The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2013.
3
Raab NA. All shook up: the shifting Soviet response to catastrophes, 1917-1991. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press 2017.
4
Huret R, Sparks RJ. Hurricane Katrina in transatlantic perspective. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press 2014.
5
Gordillo G. Rubble: the afterlife of destruction. Durham: Duke University Press 2014.
6
Birmingham L, McNeill D. Strong in the Rain: Surviving Japan’s Earthquake, Tsunami, and Fukushima Nuclear Disaster. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2012.
7
Dubois L. Haiti: the aftershocks of history. 1st Picador ed. New York: Picador 2013.
8
Sagalyn LB. Power at ground zero: politics, money, and the remaking of lower Manhattan. New York: Oxford University Press 2016.
9
Yarwood JR, Seebacher A, Strufe N, et al. Rebuilding Mostar: urban reconstruction in a war zone. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 1999.
10
Qualls KD. From Ruins to Reconstruction: Urban Identity in Soviet Sevastopol After World War II. Ithaca: Cornell University Press 2009.
11
Nelson MK. Ruin nation: destruction and the American Civil War. Athens, Ga: University of Georgia Press 2012.
12
Hein C, Diefendorf JM, Ishida Y, editors. Rebuilding urban Japan after 1945. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan 2003.
13
Birch, E L and Wachter SM. Rebuilding Urban Places After Disaster, lessons from Hurricane Katrina. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006 .
14
Steinberg T. Acts of God: The Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America. 2nd Revised edition. New York: Oxford University Press Inc 2005.
15
Coaffee J, Wood DM, Rogers P. The Everyday Resilience of the City: How Cities Respond to Terrorism and Disaster. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2008.
16
Campanella R, University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Center for Louisiana Studies. Geographies of New Orleans: urban fabrics before the storm. Lafayette: Center for Louisiana Studies 2006.
17
Woude AM van der, Hayami A, De Vries J. Urbanization in history: a process of dynamic interaction. Oxford: Clarendon 1990.
18
Nightingale CH. Segregation: a global history of divided cities. Paperback edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2015.
19
Kenny N, Madgin R, editors. Cities beyond borders: comparative and transnational approaches to urban history. Paperback edition. London: Taylor & Francis Group 2017.
20
Saunier P-Y, Ewen S. Another global city. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2008.
21
Rodgers DT. Atlantic crossings: social politics in a progressive age. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 1998.
22
Hall P. Cities in Civilization: culture, innovation, and urban order. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1998.
23
Osterhammel J. The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century. Princeton University Press 2014.
24
Ewen S. What is urban history? Cambridge, UK: Polity 2016.
25
Remes JAC. Disaster citizenship: survivors, solidarity, and power in the Progressive Era. Urbana: University of Illinois Press 2016.
26
Aldrich DP. Building Resilience: Social Capital in Post-disaster Recovery. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press 2012.
27
Healey MA. The ruins of the new Argentina: Peronism and the remaking of San Juan after the 1944 earthquake. Durham: Duke University Press 2011.
28
Schencking JC. The great Kantō earthquake and the chimera of national reconstruction in Japan. New York: Columbia University Press 2013.
29
Naef P. La ville-martyre: guerre, tourisme et mémoire en ex-Yougoslavie. Genève: Éditions Slatkine 2016.
30
Hoffman S, Oliver-Smith A. The Angry Earth: Disaster in Anthropological Perspective. London: Routledge 1999.
31
Muñoz-Rojas O. Ashes and granite: destruction and reconstruction in the Spanish Civil War and its aftermath. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press 2011.
32
Adger WN, Hughes TP, Folke C, et al. Social-Ecological Resilience to Coastal Disasters. Science. 2005;309:1036–9.
33
Aldrich DP. Between Market and State: Directions in Social Science Research on Disaster. Perspectives on Politics. 2011;9:61–8. doi: 10.1017/S1537592710003294
34
Aldrich DP. Building resilience: social capital in post-disaster recovery. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press 2012.
35
Amaratunga D. Post-disaster reconstruction of the built environment : rebuilding for resilience. Wiley-Blackwell 2011.
36
Bankoff G, Lübken U, Sand J. Flammable cities: urban conflagration and the making of the modern world. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press 2012.
37
Barnett MN. Empire of humanity: a history of humanitarianism. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press 2011.
38
Beck U. World Risk Society as Cosmopolitan Society?: Ecological Questions in a Framework of Manufactured Uncertainties. Theory, Culture & Society. 1996;13:1–32. doi: 10.1177/0263276496013004001
39
Beck U. Living in the world risk society. Economy and Society. 2006;35:329–45. doi: 10.1080/03085140600844902
40
Bergman J. Disaster: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis. History Compass. 2008;6:934–46. doi: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2008.00519.x
41
Berke PR, Campanella TJ. Planning for Postdisaster Resiliency. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2006;604:192–207.
42
Buchenau J, Johnson LL. Aftershocks: earthquakes and popular politics in Latin America. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2009.
43
Bullock N, Verpoest L. Living with history, 1914-1964: rebuilding Europe after the First and Second World Wars and the role of heritage preservation = La reconstruction en Europe après la Première et la Seconde Guerre Mondiale et le rôle de la conservation des monuments historiques. Leuven: Leuven University Press .
44
Cabanes B. The Great War and the origins of Humanitarianism, 1918-1924. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014.
45
Campbell D, Graham S, Monk DB. Introduction to Urbicide: The Killing of Cities? Theory & Event. 2007;10.
46
Chang SE. Urban disaster recovery: a measurement framework and its application to the 1995 Kobe earthquake. Disasters. 2010;34:303–27. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2009.01130.x
47
Funck M, Chickering R, editors. Endangered cities: military power and urban societies in the era of the world wars. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers 2004.
48
Clancey GK. Earthquake nation: the cultural politics of Japanese seismicity, 1868-1930. Berkeley: University of California Press 2006.
49
Clout H. The great reconstruction of towns and cities in France 1918–35. Planning Perspectives. 2005;20:1–33. doi: 10.1080/0266543042000300519
50
Clout H. Reconstruction in the Manche département after the Normandy Landings. Modern & Contemporary France. 2008;16:3–21. doi: 10.1080/09639480701802625
51
Cody JW. American planning in republican China, 1911-1937. Planning Perspectives. 1996;11:339–77. doi: 10.1080/026654396364808
52
Coward Martin. ‘Urbicide’ Reconsidered. Theory & Event. 2007;10.
53
Coward M. Urbicide: the politics of urban destruction. London: Routledge 2009.
54
Daniels RJ, Kettl DF, Kunreuther H. On risk and disaster: lessons from Hurricane Katrina. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2006.
55
Dauber ML. The sympathetic state: disaster relief and the origins of the American welfare state. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2013.
56
Davies AR. Saving San Francisco: relief and recovery after the 1906 disaster. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Temple University Press 2012.
57
Davies G. The Emergence of a National Politics of Disaster, 1865–1900. Journal of Policy History. 2014;26:305–26.
58
Davis M. Ecology of fear: Los Angeles and the imagination of disaster. London: Picador 1999.
59
Diefendorf JM, Mazal Holocaust Collection. In the wake of war: the reconstruction of German cities after World War II. New York: Oxford University Press 1993.
60
Diefendorf JM. Reconstructing Devastated Cities: Europe after World War II and New Orleans after Katrina. Journal of Urban Design. 2009;14:377–97. doi: 10.1080/13574800903056895
61
El-Masri S. Displacements and Reconstruction: The Case of West Beirut - Lebanon. Disasters. 1989;13:334–44.
62
Erikson KT. A new species of trouble: the human experience of modern disasters. New York: W.W. Norton & Co 1995.
63
Finch C, Emrich CT, Cutter SL. Disaster disparities and differential recovery in New Orleans. Population and Environment. 2010;31:179–202.
64
Freestone R, editor. Urban planning in a changing world: the twentieth century experience. London: E & FN Spon 2000.
65
Garcia S, Kotzen B, editors. Reconstructing Sarajevo: Negotiating Socio-Political Complexity. 2014.
66
Gatrell P. A whole empire walking: refugees in Russia during World War I. Bloomington: Indiana University Press 1999.
67
Gatrell P. Introduction: World Wars and Population Displacement in Europe in the Twentieth Century. Contemporary European History. 2007;16. doi: 10.1017/S0960777307004092
68
Gillette H. Camden after the fall: decline and renewal in a post-industrial city. 1st pbk. ed. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2006.
69
Haas JE, Kates RW, Bowden MJ. Reconstruction following disaster. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press 1977.
70
Harrison P. Reconstruction and planning in the aftermath of the Anglo-Boer South African War: the experience of the Colony of Natal, 1900–1910. Planning Perspectives. 2002;17:163–82. doi: 10.1080/02665430110111865
71
Kohlrausch M, Hoffmann S-L. Introduction: Post-Catastrophic Cities. Journal of Modern European History. 2011;9:308–13. doi: 10.17104/1611-8944_2011_3_308
72
Holm Pedersen M. UNHCR - Between homes: post-war return, emplacement and the negotiation of belonging in Lebanon, Marianne Holm Pedersen. 2003.
73
Hubbard P, Faire L, Lilley K. Contesting the modern city: reconstruction and everyday life in post-war coventry. Planning Perspectives. 2003;18:377–97. doi: 10.1080/0266543032000117523
74
Irwin J. Making the world safe: the American Red Cross and a nation’s humanitarian awakening. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2013.
75
Irwin JF. The disaster of war: American understandings of catastrophe, conflict and relief. First World War Studies. 2014;5:17–28.
76
Irwin JF. Taming Total War: Great War-Era American Humanitarianism and its Legacies. Diplomatic History. 2014;38:763–75. doi: 10.1093/dh/dhu022
77
Jones EC, Murphy AD. The political economy of hazards and disasters. Lanham: AltaMira Press 2009.
78
Kacowicz AM, Lutomski P. Population resettlement in international conflicts: a comparative study. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books .
79
Kage R. Civic engagement in postwar Japan: the revival of a defeated society. New York: Cambridge University Press 2011.
80
Kardov K, Norwegian University of Science and Technology. Program on East European Cultures and Societies. Reconstructing community, recreating boundaries: identity politics and production of social space in post-war Vukovar. Trondheim: Program on East European Cultures and Societies .
81
Kates RW, Colten CE, Laska S, et al. Reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: A Research Perspective. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 2006;103:14653–60.
82
Koselleck R, Richter MW. Crisis. Journal of the History of Ideas. 2006;67:357–400.
83
Kramer J. Unsettling Europe. 1st Vintage books ed. New York: Vintage Books 1981.
84
Larkham PJ, Lilley KD. Plans, planners and city images: place promotion and civic boosterism in British reconstruction planning. Urban History. 2003;30:183–205. doi: 10.1017/S0963926803001123
85
Levy C, Roseman M. Three postwar eras in comparison: western Europe 1918--1945--1989. New York: Palgrave 2002.
86
Lincoln T. Fleeing from firestorms: government, cities, native place associations and refugees in the Anti-Japanese War of Resistance. Urban History. 2011;38:437–56. doi: 10.1017/S0963926811000587
87
Mabin A, Smit D. Reconstructing South Africa’s cities? The making of urban planning 1900–2000. Planning Perspectives. 1997;12:193–223. doi: 10.1080/026654397364726
88
Massard-Guilbaud G, Thorsheim P. Cities, Environments, and European History. Journal of Urban History. 2007;33:691–701. doi: 10.1177/0096144207301414
89
Mazower M. Reconstruction: The Historiographical Issues. Past & Present. 2011;210:17–28. doi: 10.1093/pastj/gtq038
90
Melosi MV. Humans, Cities and Nature: How do cities fit in the material world? Journal of Urban History. 2010;36:3–21.
91
Mick C. Lemberg, Lwów, L’viv, 1914-1947: violence and ethnicity in a contested city. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press 2016.
92
Mirisaee SM, Ibrahim MA, Faizah A. Post-War Resettlement and Urban Reconstruction: A case study of Khorram-Shahr, Iran. Journal of Design and Built Environment. 2015;15:24–32.
93
Olshansky RB, Hopkins LD, Johnson LA. Disaster and Recovery: Processes Compressed in Time. Natural Hazards Review. 2012;13:173–8. doi: 10.1061/(ASCE)NH.1527-6996.0000077
94
Orde A. British policy and European reconstruction after the First World War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2002.
95
Pais JF, Elliott JR. Places as Recovery Machines: Vulnerability and Neighborhood Change After Major Hurricanes. Social Forces. 2008;86:1415–53. doi: 10.1353/sof.0.0047
96
Patenaude BM. The big show in Bololand: the American relief expedition to Soviet Russia in the famine of 1921. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press 2002.
97
Paulmann J. Conjunctures in the History of International Humanitarian Aid during the Twentieth Century. Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development. 2013;4:215–38. doi: 10.1353/hum.2013.0016
98
Perry RW, Quarantelli EL. What is a disaster?: new answers to old questions. [Philadelphia, Pa.]: Xlibris 2005.
99
Ricca S. Reinventing Jerusalem: Israel’s reconstruction of the Jewish Quarter after 1967. London: I.B. Tauris 2007.
100
Rodríguez H, Quarantelli EL, Dynes RR, editors. Handbook of disaster research. New York: Springer 2007.
101
Rogers P. Resilience & the city: change, (dis)order, and disaster. Burlington: Ashgate 2012.
102
Rossi I. Community reconstruction after an earthquake: dialectical sociology in action. Westport, Conn: Praeger 1993.
103
Saunier P-Y. Sketches from the Urban Internationale, 1910-50: Voluntary Associations, International Institutions and US Philanthropic Foundations. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. 2001;25:380–403. doi: 10.1111/1468-2427.00317
104
Savitch HV. Cities in a time of terror: space, territory, and local resilience. Armonk: M.E. Sharpe 2008.
105
Schencking JC. Catastrophe, Opportunism, Contestation: The Fractured Politics of Reconstructing Tokyo following the Great Kantô Earthquake of 1923. Modern Asian Studies. 2006;40:833–73.
106
Schneider J, Susser I. Wounded cities: destruction and reconstruction in a globalized world. Oxford: Berg 2003.
107
Seidensticker E. Tokyo rising: the city since the great earthquake. 1st Harvard University Press pbk. ed. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1991.
108
Silverman DP. Reconstructing Europe after the Great War. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1982.
109
Slae B, Kark R, Shoval N. Post-war reconstruction and conservation of the historic Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem, 1967–1975. Planning Perspectives. 2012;27:369–92. doi: 10.1080/02665433.2012.681138
110
Slap AL. The Strong Arm of the Military Power of the United States. The Chicago Fire, the Constitution and Reconstruction. Civil War History. 2001;47:146–63.
111
Smith CS. Urban disorder and the shape of belief: the great Chicago fire, the Haymarket bomb, and the model town of Pullman. 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2007.
112
Solnit R. A paradise built in hell: the extraordinary communities that arise in disasters. New York: Viking 2009.
113
Starn R. Historians and ‘Crisis’. Past & Present. 1971;3–22.
114
Strupp C. Dealing with Disaster: The San Francisco Earthquake of 1906. Institute of European Studies. Published Online First: 2006.
115
Zeilinga de Boer J, Sanders DT. Earthquakes in human history: the far-reaching effects of seismic disruptions. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2007.
116
Raab NA. All shook up: the shifting Soviet response to catastrophes, 1917-1991. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press 2017.