It can be a few days or a few weeks between the time when disaster strikes and relief organizations can respond; in the meantime, communities are left fending for themselves. FEMA wanted to make sure help was available before its workers arrived. So after Hurricane Sandy, the organization reached out to frog, a Manhattan-based design firm that had felt the effects of the disaster in its own backyard. Learn how frog's designers and artists paired with government officials to draft a plan that bridges the gap between informal and formal relief efforts, and make sure communities are prepared ahead of time. Their print playbook for implementing community-run disaster recovery centers (DRCs) proves that design can help solve problems even on the largest scale.
Zum Download / Zur Anzeige
Weiterführende Informationen
Personen: frog,
frog,:
frog's FEMA Disaster Relief Innovation : LinkedIn, 2014. - 00:24:51.00
Signatur: eLearning - LEO-SUED Medien