Disasters
January 2016 Volume 40, Issue 1 Pages 1–182
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/disa.2016.40.issue-1/issuetoc
.
Integrated disaster relief logistics: a stepping stone towards viable civil–military networks? (pages 7–25)
Peter Tatham and Sebastiaan (Bas) Rietjens
Article first published online: 13 AUG 2015 | DOI: 10.1111/disa.12131
Abstract
The twenty-first century has seen a significant rise in all forms of disasters and this has resulted in military and humanitarian organisations becoming more frequently engaged in the provision of support to those affected. Achieving an efficient and effective logistic preparation and response is one of the key elements in mitigating the impact of such events, but the establishment of mechanisms to deliver an appropriately integrated civil–military approach remains elusive. Not least because of the high percentage of assistance budgets spent on logistics, this area is considered to represent fertile ground for developing improved processes and understanding. In practice, the demands placed on civilian and military logisticians are broadly similar, as is the solution space. Speaking a common language and using common concepts, it is argued, therefore, that the logistic profession should be in the vanguard of the development of an improved civil–military interface.