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Book Review
California Earthquakes: Science, Risk, and the Politics of Hazard Mitigation. By Carl-Henry Geschwind. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 2001. x + 337 pp. Notes, bibliographical essay, index. $45.00.)
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California has a Seismic Safety Commission, responsible for establishing
and enforcing seismic engineering and geology codes, and that the
federal government has supported a wide-ranging (if under-funded)
program of earthquake research, would likely be of little surprise
to a well-informed citizen of California. How this came to be from
1906 to 1977 is the topic of Carl-Henry Geschwind's thorough and
well-documented study of the history of earthquakes in California.
The book documents the development of the scientific understanding
of California earthquakes and examines the evolution of the "regulatory-state"
apparatus of enforcing an ever increasingly strict set of building
codes in the state. Geschwind adeptly leads the reader from the
great San Francisco earthquake of 1906 and the nascent science of
seismology, and examines how science and commercial interests clashed
over safety regulations sixty years before Ronald Regan became governor. |
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