Title
How U.S. Emergency Management Evolved. From Civil Defense To Resilience
Tipo de registro
Video
Contact
Andrew Slaten
Year
2,022
Publisher
Imara IHG

Summary
This video traces the evolution of the U.S. emergency management system over the past 50 years, showing how major disasters, security threats, and policy shifts transformed a fragmented civil defense model into today’s integrated, all-hazards, resilience-focused framework. It highlights key milestones such as the creation of FEMA, the adoption of ICS and NIMS, the influence of 9/11, and the growing emphasis on equity, community engagement, and real-time situational awareness—illustrating how emergency management continues to adapt and why future leaders will shape what comes next.
Description
This video traces the 50-year evolution of the U.S. emergency management system, from a fragmented Cold War–era civil defense model to today’s integrated, all-hazards, resilience-focused architecture. It explains how disasters like Hurricane Agnes exposed coordination failures, leading to the creation of FEMA, the adoption of the Incident Command System (ICS), and the growth of emergency operations centers.

The discussion covers major turning points including hazard mitigation planning in the 1990s, the impact of 9/11 and the creation of the Department of Homeland Security, the rollout of NIMS, and the National Response Framework. It also highlights newer shifts toward equity, community engagement, GIS, real-time situational awareness, and the Whole Community approach.

Designed for students and practitioners of emergency management and disaster management, this video shows how changing threats, technology, and values continue to reshape how the United States prepares for, responds to, and recovers from disasters—and why future leaders will shape what comes next.