DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN
Disaster risk reduction
is an intrinsic part of sustainable development.
This
message came out forcefully during the Fifth Regional Platform for Disaster
Risk Reduction in the Americas, held last week in Montreal, Canada, at which
delegates debated the connections between disaster, climate change and
sustainable development.
One
way of looking at this is by adopting the so-called “integrated risk
management” approach. This is a conceptual and practical approach that today
replaces traditional concepts about emergency or disaster management, which
focus on the immediate response to an event and the subsequent recovery
process.
Integrated
risk management requires a more thorough knowledge and understanding of the
scenarios of risk. The notion of the "social construction of risk "
is central, which points to the existence of chronic risk due to poverty (as
expressed in unemployment, low income, malnutrition, etc.), environmental
degradation and governance challenges. These drivers of risk reflect the
structural conditions of unsustainable development models.
In
Central America for instance, El Niño is an event that adds stress to already
existing environmental, climatic and vulnerability conditions. Thus, the causes
of crisis in the agricultural, health or water sectors are more related to
human actions, such as overexploitation of resources, poor land use planning
and inadequate technologies, than to physical events.
Historically,
risks have been dealt with without addressing the structural elements that
cause or contribute to risk. One examples of this type of action is the
construction of dikes to protect settlements in flood prone areas - without
considering strategies to change the situation of poverty that led to
settlement at that location in the first place.
Another
way of addressing risk is to seek changes in the conditions of poverty,
exclusion and marginalization, which fuel the construction of risk. This
transformational change is exactly what the Sustainable
Development Goals are about. It is important to recall that
Agenda 2030 stems from an urgent need to do development differently. In
the context of planetary boundaries, particularly climate change, and
increasing risks, business as usual is no longer an option.
At
UNDP, we stress the importance of taking into account the situation of the most
vulnerable populations. These are the people who suffer the greatest impact
from disasters, who have the least capacity to recover or bounce back to
re-establish normalcy. They have less control of or access to resources and
less participation or power in terms of decision-making.
So,
how is this done in practice? There are many ways of integrating social
policies and disaster risk reduction. One opportunity is to take advantage of
existing social protection schemes to create safety nets and buffer to shocks.
For instance, cash transfer schemes can be agile and efficient way to reach
populations in an emergency.
A
UNDP study on cash transfers as tool to help early recovery in LAC showed that
they have great potential to help the most vulnerable populations. Examples of
this already exist in the region, from Ecuador, Mexico, Chile and Dominican
Republic.
The
biggest challenge for comprehensive risk management is, without doubt, to
anticipate future risk and reduce its likelihood. Again, this prospective
management is intrinsically linked to the notion of sustainable development,
which seeks to achieve improvements in well-being, livelihoods and
infrastructure, among others.
Development
processes should seek to ensure that populations, livelihoods and
infrastructure have lower levels of risk – and be oriented to avoid creating
new risks in the future. In this way, the concepts of sustainable
development and integrated risk management are two sides of the same coin.
Credit:
www.undp.org
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN
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