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Demography: a tool for understanding the wildland-urban interface fire problem

Author: Davis, J.B.
Date: 1989
Periodical: In: Symposium on Fire and Watershed Management; 1988 October 26-29; Sacramento, CA. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-109. Riverside, CA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Forest & Range Experiment Station
Abstract: Fire managers across the nation are confronting the rapidly developing problem created by movement of people into wildland areas, increasing what has been termed the wildland-urban interface. The problem is very complex from the standpoint of fire planning and management. To plan and manage more effectively, fire managers should identify three types of interface areas, each with its own unique set of demographic factors, local land use, and fire protection problems. By examining and understanding how future trends will affect fire protection tactics and strategy in each of the interfaces, managers should be able to plan ahead--to be proactive rather than reactive in relations with the public and its leaders. To do this, however, fire managers should understand how population dynamics--demographics--influences the area that they manage.


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