Eds Lecture
Eds Lecture
Eds Lecture
RESILIENT
COMMUNITIES
Knowledge Building and
Actionable Knowledge Through
Grassroots Research,
Communication and Participation
Disaster Defined
(UN/ISDR)
A serious disruption of the functioning of
a community or a society causing
widespread human, material,
economic, or environmental losses
that exceed the ability of the affected
community or society to cope using its
own resources.
A disaster is a function of the risk process.
It results from the combination of hazards,
conditions of vulnerability, and insufficient
capacity or measures to reduce the
potential negative consequences of risk
(UN/International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, 2004)
Disaster Defined
(IFRC)
A disaster is a sudden,
sudden calamitous event
that seriously disrupts the functioning of
a community or society and causes human,
material, and economic or environmental
losses that exceed the communitys or
societys ability to cope using its own
resources. Though often caused by nature,
disasters can have human origins
(VULNERABILITY+HAZARD) /CAPACITY=DIS
ASTER
ASTER
Risk Defined
Aprobabilityor
threatofdamage,
probability
threat
injury, liability,loss, or any other
negative occurrence that is caused
by external or internal
vulnerabilities and that may be
avoided through pre-emptive action.
(businessdictionary.com)
Vulnerability Defined
The diminished capacity of an individual or
group to anticipate,
anticipate cope with,
with resist and
recover from the impact of a natural or
man-made hazard.
The concept is relative and dynamic. Often,
vulnerability is most often associated
withpoverty, but it can also arise when
people are isolated, insecure and
defenceless in the face of risk, shock or
stress. (IFRC.Org)
People differ in their exposure to risk as a
result of their social group,
group gender, ethnic
or other identity,
identity age and other factors.
factors
Natural Hazard
Defined
Earthquakes,
Landslides,
Tsunamis,and
Vulcanic Activity
Hydrological
Avalanches
Floods
Natural Hazard
Defined
Climatological
Extreme temperatures
Drought, and
Wildfires
Meteorological
Cyclones/Typhoons, and
Storms/wave surges)
Biological
Disease epidemicsand
Insect/animal plagues).
Technological/Man-made
Hazard
Technologicalorman-made
hazards are events that arecaused
by humansand occur inor close to
human settlements
Complex emergencies/conflicts,
Famine,
Displaced populations
Industrial accidents,and
Transport accident
Environmental degradation,
Pollution, and
Other accidents.
Aggravating Factors
There are a range of challenges which
result in increased frequency, complexity
and severity of disasters, such as:
Climate change/Global Warming
Unplanned-urbanization,
Under-development
Poverty
Threat of pandemics
(epidemicofinfectious diseasethat has
spread through human populations
across a large region)
How to Determine
Peoples Vulnerability?
Two questions need to be asked:
to whatthreat or hazardare they
vulnerable?
what makes them vulnerableto
that threat or hazard?
How to Counter
Vulnerability?
Requires the reducing the impact of
thehazarditself where possible through
mitigation,predictionandwarning,
preparedness, building capacitiesto
withstand and cope withhazards; and,
Tackling the root causes of vulnerability,
such aspoverty, poor governance,
discrimination, inequality and
inadequate access to resources and
livelihoods.
Capacity to Cope
Hazards
The resources available, ready and
accessible to individuals, households
and communities to cope with a threat
or to resist the impact of a hazard.
Such resources can be physical or
material, but they can also be found in
the way a community is organized or
in the skills or attributes of individuals
and/or organizations in the community.
(IFRC)
MANAGING DISASTERS
IN THE COMMUNITY
LEVEL
Developing Resilient
Communities to Disasters
Disaster Risk
Management Defined
The systematic process of using
administrative decisions,
decisions organization,
organization
operational skills,
skills and capacities and
capabilities to implement policies,
strategies, and coping capacities of the
society and communities to lessen the
impacts of hazards and related environmental
and technological disasters.
This includes all forms of activities,
activities including
structural and non-structural measures to avoid
(prevention) or to limit (mitigation,
preparedness, and response) the adverse
effects of hazards (adapted from UN/ISDR, 2004).
Prevention
Mitigation
Preparedness
2. Disaster Response
3. Disaster Recovery
Rehabilitation
Reconstruction
Disaster Risk
Reduction Defined
Political
Technical
Participatory/Empowerment
Resource Mobilization
Principles on Disaster
Risk Reduction
Principles on Disaster
Risk Reduction
Recovery activities should do more than merely
return disaster-affected people and
institutions back to the situation that existed
before a disaster.
disaster Recovery phase should offers
opportunities to strengthen the capacity of
community and the local government to cope with
the impact of disasters and to reduce their
vulnerability to future hazards and shocks,
shocks
i.e., restoring destroyed mangroves as protection
against storm surge, increasing fishing
opportunities, or developing the disaster
management skills of local government authorities.
DRR should be incorporated into regular
development planning and programming to
reduce or avoid the negative impacts of future
hazard events.
DRR should implemented using DRM approaches
Disaster Response
Defined
The provision of assistance
or intervention during or
Principles on Disaster
Response
Disaster-affected populations initially will require
critical life-saving support.
support At the same time,
their communities, institutions, and livelihoods
will have been physically destroyed or
weakened by the impact of the crisis. Many
households and communities will begin a process
of self-recovery as soon as possible after a
disaster, out of practical necessity.
The vulnerabilities that turned a hazard into a
disaster in the first place often get recreated in the
process. For example, homes may be
reconstructed using the same building
techniques that caused them to collapse.
collapse Poor
households may resort to selling off their scarce
productive assets in the immediate aftermath
of a disaster in order to meet their basic needs
and become even more vulnerable to future shocks.
Principles on Disaster
Response
International experience also has demonstrated the
close links between relief and recovery.
recovery The
choices made regarding the kinds of relief
assistance to be provided, and how it is
provided, can facilitate or hinder the recovery of
affected communities (Christoplos, 2006a).
For instance, following the 2005 Pakistan earthquake,
instead of distributing expensive winterized tents with
a limited lifespan, the Pakistan Poverty Alleviation
Fund (PPAF) provided affected communities with
corrugated galvanized iron sheets and tools.
tools The
tools and materials were used by communities
to build themselves temporary shelters using
wood and other materials salvaged from the
rubble. They could be used later in permanent
home reconstruction.
reconstruction
Disaster Response
The choices made regarding the provision of
relief also can have positive or negative
impacts on reducing disaster risksfor
example, undertaking a rapid environmental
impact assessment to identify whether toxic
substances have been released into the
environment following an earthquake (e.g., the
chemical leaks from factories damaged by the
May 2008 earthquake in China1) and then
mounting a campaign to reduce the threat
to nearby communities.
communities
For these reasons, relief needs to be carried
out with a view to supporting and
reinforcing the early recovery and risk
reduction of disaster-affected populations
Disaster Recovery
Defined
Disaster recovery (rehabilitation and
reconstruction) refers to the decisions
and actions taken after a disaster
with a view to restoring or improving
the pre-disaster living conditions of
the stricken community,
community while
encouraging and facilitating necessary
adjustments to reduce disaster risk.
Recovery affords an opportunity to
develop and apply disaster risk
reduction measures (UN/ISDR, 2004).
Principles on Disaster
Recovery
When a natural disaster strikes in a poor
community,
community not only does it cause serious
loss of life and property, it often takes away
or threatens the livelihoods and futures of
those who survived.
survived This is especially the case
where productive household members have
been lost or permanently disabled.
disabled For many
households, not only will their short-term economic
and social vulnerability be increased, but their
ability to cope with future shocks may also
be eroded.
eroded These pressures can contribute to
increased poverty and marginalization in a
society.
society They can aggravate tensions or
conflicts that may have already existed within or
between communities prior to the disaster.
Principles on Disaster
Recovery
In the case of slow-onset or regularly
recurring hazard events or shocks,
many poor communities live in a
constant state of recovery, where
temporary relief has become a
permanent coping strategy.
strategy For example,
in Malawi drought occurs with such
frequency that people have little time to
recover before another drought hits. This has
resulted in deepening poverty, chronic
food insecurity, and aid dependency.
Principles on Disaster
Recovery