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I n July last year a flood hit the Indian state
of Assam, affecting 1.6 million people
as they fled, abandoning homes and
livestock. In October, a hurricane struck
Haiti, affecting 2.1 million people and
leaving 806,000 in urgent need of food. In
Peru, February this year saw the worst floods
in two decades, killing over 100 people and
displacing nearly 158,000. Hospitals, roads,
and schools were all severely affected.
Whatever their origin, disasters hit the
poorest and most vulnerable communities the
hardest. The loss of property and infrastructure
is often just the start of a vicious cycle of poverty.
“Let’s say your town is hit by a hurricane,” says
IIASA researcher Adriana Keating. “The school
is damaged, and your kids’ education suffers.
Your house was blown down too, and you have
to take out a high-interest loan to rebuild it.
It’s hard to recover from that: people struggle
along in debt, children never get that education
back. And what happens when the next storm
comes along?”
Keating and colleagues in the IIASA
Risk and Resilience program are exploring
how to break this cycle, how communities
can not only face disasters but continue to
work towards their sustainable development goals despite them. This process starts, says
Keating, with understanding what disaster
resilience is, and what it isn’t.
In a recent study the team found that
traditional definitions of disaster resilience
focus on reducing risks. That is important, but
it needs to be extended. The risks are always
going to be there, and in many cases will even
worsen under climate change. “Resilience is not
just disaster risk management done well,” says
Keating. “It’s living in harmony with disasters,
it’s thriving in the face of them.”
Developing real disaster resilience means
linking it with sustainable development and
shifting the focus to community wellbeing.
“We must also accept that risk is constructed
by humans,” adds Keating. “If a typhoon hits a
deserted island it’s not a disaster; it’s only ever a
disaster if people and their property are in the
way. That also means we have some power to
prevent new risks—by avoiding construction
on flood plains, for instance.”
Making disaster resilience a part of
sustainable development and vice versa ensures
that the two reinforce rather than undermine
each other. Building homes on a fault line or
flood plain might look like the best option for
economic development—and it could be, in the short term—but risk and resilience analysis
will show that it puts communities into harm’s
way. Getting schools running in the aftermath
of a disaster is not only an important part of
sustainable development, it also improves
disaster resilience for the future.
Putting these principles into action
in Peru, IIASA researchers and the non-
governmental organization Practical Action
brought together members of vulnerable
communities and other stakeholders to explore
the links between sustainable development
and flooding. “A greater focus on long-term
flood risk management in land-use planning
and governance is vital to breaking the
cycle of disaster impacts that undermines
development in the region,” says IIASA
researcher Adam French, who spearheaded
the Peru collaboration. DB
Further info
§Â
Keating A, Campbell K, Mechler R, Magnuszewski P,
Mochizuki J, Liu W, Szoenyi M, & McQuistan C (2016).
Disaster resilience: What it is and how it can engender a
meaningful change in development policy. Development
Policy Review 35 (1): 65-91. [pure.iiasa.ac.at/11897]
§Â
blog.iiasa.ac.at/tag/resilience17
Adriana Keating keatinga@iiasa.ac.at
Adam French french@iiasa.ac.at
What is disaster resilience?
True disaster resilience is not just about reducing risk,
it must also have sustainable development at its core
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book options, Volume summer 2017"
options
Volume summer 2017
- Title
- options
- Volume
- summer 2017
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2017
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine