You are here:  Home Research centre Disaster risk reduction and resilience building

Research centre

Folder: Disaster risk reduction and resilience building

folder.png

In many parts of the developing world the risk of disasters is increasing. Many factors are driving this: population growth, climate change, conflict, increasing urbanisation, food price volatility, environmental degradation and continued poor governance. In recent decades, there has been a rise in both the number and impact of natural disasters. Poor housing, lack of health facilities and infrastructure put nearly one billion people living in urban informal settlements at particular risk. The lives and livelihoods of people living in flood plains, low lying coastal areas and steep slopes are also in danger.

Deforestation, overgrazing and land degradation have damaged ecosystems and are exacerbating the risks of disasters such as floods or landslides.

Very often, it is women who are most affected. They often have less access to political and economic resources needed to protect themselves, and to deal with the effects.

CARE International assists people to diversify and adapt how they make a living. We help ensure urban dwellers are able live on safe land and have access to infrastructure and services, and support the protection and enhancement of ecosystems through community based natural resource management.

We see resilience as the ability of women and men, communities and societies, to resist, absorb and recover from shocks and stresses while retaining dignity, functionality and developing the ability to learn, cope with or adapt to hazards, stresses and change. CARE acts to empower local communities, especially women, to reduce their exposure to risk and strengthen their resilience.

CARE believes that development, in whatever guise it takes, must lead to disaster resilience building. Shocks are increasing in frequency and intensity, and without major advances in household and community resilience, they will erode development gains. At community level, threats and hazards are often experienced as a single shock and not as a set of distinct problems. The solution must thus be in an integrated approach to resilience.

Powered by Web Agency

  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »

Files:

  • pdf.png

    Disaster Risk Reduction in Pakistan: The Contribution of DEC Member Agencies, 2010-2012

    File Size:
    1 MB
    Downloads:
    171

    To mark the 2nd anniversary of the launch of its Pakistan Floods Appeal the DEC has published a report highlighting the need for improved Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) in Pakistan.

    The report reviews the work of the DEC’s member agencies (including CARE) but also highlights the need for a stronger national and provincial framework to ensure the prevention of disasters, and the mitigation of those that do occur through activities such as large scale flood defences and the avoidance of their worst impacts through more effective early warning systems.

    These systems must be delivered by the Government of Pakistan with the backing of international donors but the DEC member agencies and their local partners can build on their existing household and community based DRR work to support it.

    The study found members of the DEC had already helped many households and communities to be better prepared for future disasters as part of their emergency work. The results would be further strengthened by an even greater focus on women and marginalised communities in disaster preparedness, and ensuring that DRR was also part of longer term development work.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Learning paper: Building resilience in a complex environment

    File Size:
    800 KB
    Downloads:
    497

    The Regional Resilience Enhancement Against Drought (RREAD) Programme, now in its fifth year of operation, seeks to strengthen communities’ capacity to withstand, absorb and recover from shocks by gradually improving innovation, diversification, governance and resource management approaches.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Improving drought response in pastoral regions of Ethiopia

    File Size:
    779 KB
    Downloads:
    523

    This study was commissioned by the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), Save the Children UK, Save the Children US and CARE International, hereafter referred to as the Core Group. The overall purpose of the study was to provide an overview of the timing, appropriateness and efficacy of interventions in the drought that affected the pastoral lowlands of Ethiopia in 2005/2006.

    The study also sought to identify mechanisms to initiate more timely and appropriate interventions to protect and support pastoral livelihoods. The study has identified mechanisms, systems, capacities and institutions which need to be strengthened in order to trigger more timely and appropriate livelihoodbased responses to drought. The study also explored donor interest in resourcing these changes.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Escaping the hunger Cycle: Pathways to resilience in Sahel

    File Size:
    2 MB
    Downloads:
    306

    This report is a detailed analysis of changes in policies and programs in the Sahel since 2005. It assesses to what extent lessons of the 2005 food crisis were applied during the crisis of 2010. Commissioned by the Sahel Working Group as a follow up to an earlier study Beyond Any Drought, the initial central question guiding this study was what lessons have been learned since 2005 about what has to change in the Sahel, so that every drought does not result in a new humanitarian crisis?

    Beyond Any Drought assessed the root causes of chronic vulnerability in the Sahel. The focus of this follow up study is to determine how aid can be more effectively reduce vulnerability in the Sahel. What can be learned from recent experience to guide decision making and improve the effectiveness of aid to prevent future food crises? The study draws from a review of literature, reports and documents, and interviews with over 70 people. Extensive fi eld visits were carried out in the areas of Niger and Chad most affected by the 2010 crisis.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Rules of the range - Natural resources management in Kenya–Ethiopia border areas

    File Size:
    652 KB
    Downloads:
    701

    The current crisis in the Horn of Africa is a drylands crisis with those affected predominantly dependent on pastoralism or agro-pastoralism. Livestock keepers on the northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia border have well-developed indigenous institutions to manage their rangelands, regulate the sharing of water and pasture and govern livestock mobility, including across the international border. These institutional aspects have rarely been given the necessary attention in national policy-making and state policies and actions have not recognised the right of pastoralists to own or manage their rangelands. The expropriation of parts of the rangeland is one reason why pastoralists’ livelihoods have lost resilience. This has exacerbated vulnerability.

    This ODI study, based on our RREAD programme and published yesterday, explores institutional issues around rangeland management and mobility and their link to livelihoods resilience to provide entry points for government agencies, international donors, regional bodies and I/NGOs wanting to support initiatives in cross-border natural resources management. It recommends that, for pastoralism to remain a viable livelihood option, and one which continues to contribute millions of dollars to national economies, institutional arrangements and governance structures around natural resources and land management must be better understood and better supported.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Disaster risk reduction in the drylands of the Horn of Africa

    File Size:
    6 MB
    Downloads:
    646

    In the drylands of the Horn and East Africa a consortium of NGOs are steadily building up the resilience and adaptive capacities of pastoralist communities coping with repeated episodes of drought and disaster.

    As partners in ECHO’s Drought Cycle Management programme, these agencies are successfully identifying how Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) can work in practice in unforgiving dryland environments—where historically development efforts have been limited.

    In this first newsletter, produced by Oxfam’s Regional Learning and Advocacy Project (REGLAP), selected examples of good practice in DRR have been brought together for sharing across the ECHO DCM partners and with other interested agencies.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Taking drought into account: Addressing chronic vulnerability among pastoralists in the Horn of Africa

    File Size:
    279 KB
    Downloads:
    535

    In 2006, a particularly severe drought hit the Greater Horn of Africa, plunging some 11 million people into crisis. The pastoral areas on the Ethiopia–Kenya–Somalia border were badly affected, with livestock losses of up to 70% and the mass migration of pastoralists out of drought-affected areas. This HPG Policy Brief argues that such catastrophic effects can be averted if pastoralist livelihoods are supported with timely and appropriate livelihoods-based interventions.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Pastoralists’ vulnerability in the Horn of Africa

    File Size:
    488 KB
    Downloads:
    1186

    Exploring political marginalisation, donors’ policies and cross-border issues – Literature review.

    The Humanitarian Policy Group (HPG) at the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) was commissioned by CARE International (CARE) to provide a review of the literature on the nature of pastoralists’ vulnerability in the Horn of Africa (focusing specifically on Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia) and chart ways in which agencies have responded and identifying best practice. This literature review is part of a broader project that HPG is undertaking to provide learning support to CARE and document and strengthen best practices around drought cycle management in the Horn of Africa (HoA).

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Livestock marketing in Kenya- Ethiopia border areas: A baseline study

    File Size:
    862 KB
    Downloads:
    478

    Livestock is the main household asset and a key productive resource for pastoralist communities living in the border areas of Kenya and Ethiopia. However, recurrent droughts are eroding pastoralists’ livestock base and weakening their livelihoods and their resilience to climatic shocks. Livestock marketing, understood as the process through which live animals change ownership, is increasingly perceived as critical for improving pastoral household income. Efforts aimed at addressing constraints to the development of efficient and vibrant livestock marketing activities in the region are increasingly seen as a meaningful way of reducing pastoralists’ vulnerability to drought.

    This baseline study, commissioned by CARE International, identifies structural issues behind livestock marketing in Mandera Central and West in Kenya and the Borana zone in Ethiopia.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • pdf.png

    Working across borders Harnessing the potential of cross- border activities to improve livelihood security in the Horn of Africa drylands

    File Size:
    1 MB
    Downloads:
    383

    The ecosystems, identities and livelihoods of pastoral communities in the Horn of Africa drylands and beyond have always been regional in nature. Pastoralist communities have long adopted a wide range of activities to protect their livelihoods and livestock production systems to cope with the recurrent climatic variation typical of rangeland environ-ments. Cross-border activities1 include the joint management and sharing of grazing land and water, the opportunistic use of natural resources through seasonal cross-border mobility, the sharing of information on rainfall, pasture, water availability, and livestock prices, and the trading of livestock and other commodities.

    Powered by Web Agency

  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »
Page 1 of 2
Results 1 - 10 of 11

Search CARE International UK


Sign up for free email news



Share this page: