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This document explores the growing acceptance and implementation of Owner-Driven Reconstruction (ODR) on large scales, covering national and regional programs and the participation of significant actors. It examines ten case studies that shed light on the complexities of ODR in different contexts—political, cultural, spatial, and economic. Key discussions on impacts and benefits highlight how scaling up ODR can influence reconstruction outcomes, ultimately leading to a more effective, people-centered approach to recovery after disasters.
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DEVELOPMENT FROM DISASTERSCALING UP OWNER-DRIVEN RECONSTRUCTION
WHY? • Owner Driven Reconstruction (ODR) gaining acceptance • Increasingly, implemented on a large scale: • national/regional programmes • large actors • large numbers • Widening range of: • approaches to participation • approaches to reconstruction • political, cultural, spatial and economic circumstances. • Emerging implications of the large scale for practice (and theory).
UNDERSTANDING UP-SCALING • Ten case studies • Considered in national or sub-national context • Development experts and humanitarian actors discussed up-scaling of ODR and: • impact on benefits for development • impact of/on contexts (political, institutional, cultural, spatial or economic) • Impact on different reconstruction criteria • intrinsic to elements of ODR.
Summary, keynote talk and all presentations are now on: http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/rbdo/external/DevelopmentfromDisasternotes/devdisasternotes.shtml Or email Michal Lyons michal@the-place.net for the URL!
“Building Back Better: a People Centred Approach to Reconstruction” Rugby: Practical Action Publications forthcoming January 2009