1 / 37

United Nations University (UNU) Institute for Environment & Human Security

United Nations University (UNU) Institute for Environment & Human Security. UNU Campus Worldwide. Structure of UNU-EHS, Bonn. Number of people killed worldwide, 1973-2002. Source: UN/ISDR, 2004. Population living within 100 km of the coast.

jack
Download Presentation

United Nations University (UNU) Institute for Environment & Human Security

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. United Nations University (UNU) Institute for Environment & Human Security

  2. UNU Campus Worldwide

  3. Structure of UNU-EHS, Bonn

  4. Number of people killed worldwide, 1973-2002 Source: UN/ISDR, 2004

  5. Population living within 100 km of the coast

  6. Fifty percent of the world's population currently live within sixty kilometers of the coast – at present, more than 3 billion people.

  7. Risk f = hazard and vulnerability Vulnerability Risk Hazard How would you define vulnerability?

  8. Vulnerability Definitions How much am I protected? VULNERABILITY “... a human condition or process resulting from physical, social, economic, and environmental factors which determine the likelihood and scale of damage from the impact of a given hazard“ (UNDP, 2004) “... the likelihood of injury, death, loss, disruption of livelihood or other harm in an extreme event, and/or unusual difficulties in recovering from such effects and adapt in the long-term to mitigate hazard impacts“ (Wisner, 2002)

  9. Dimensions of Vulnerability Social DimensionVulnerability of different social groups,Role of social networks (coping) Economic and Infrastructure DimensionVulnerability of different economic sectors and infrastructures (life-lines – technical) Environmental DimensionEnvironmental fragility (groundwater, land)Dependency on environmental services Institutional DimensionEffectiveness and failure of structures and institutions

  10. The Pressure and Release (PAR) model Source: According to Wisner et al., 2004: 51. Source: Wisner et al. 2004: 51

  11. Vulnerability Assessment • Awarenss about the Role of society processes shaping damage • Understanding the underlying causes of risks • Developing indicators that show spatial differences in risk • Using vulnerability information to manage risks

  12. WorldRiskIndex

  13. Components and indicators of the WorldRiskIndex

  14. Results for Exposure

  15. Results for Vulnerability

  16. Results for the WorldRiskIndex

  17. Risk Management Focussed Risk Assessment Different vulnerabilities in different phases of a disaster During the disaster After the disaster Loss of life & Livelihood Loss of life& Livelihood Vulnerability factors Vulnerability factors 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

  18. D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Early Warning & Response (short-term damage prevention) D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Exposure Reduction (long-term damage prevention) C R I S I S M ANAG EME NT e.g. infrastructures for warning decision, dissemination & evacuation e.g. hazard control, resettlement, building codes, hazard resistant infrastructures Hazard impact Risk Management Reconstruction(damage mitigation & long term damage prevention) Emergency Relief(damage mitigation) e.g. risk insurance & compensation, disaster resilient spatial planning e.g. contingency capacities and coordination C R I S I S M A N A G E M E N T

  19. Baseline Risk Assessment: Hazard and Exposure

  20. Case study Indonesia

  21. Tsunami-genic Earthquakes in Indonesia

  22. D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Early Warning & Response (short-term damage prevention) D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Exposure Reduction (long-term damage prevention) C R I S I S M ANAG EME NT e.g. infrastructures for warning decision, dissemination & evacuation e.g. hazard control, resettlement, building codes, hazard resistant infrastructures Hazard impact Risk Management Reconstruction(damage mitigation & long term damage prevention) Emergency Relief(damage mitigation) e.g. risk insurance & compensation, disaster resilient spatial planning e.g. contingency capacities and coordination C R I S I S M A N A G E M E N T

  23. Risks and Risk Management Tasks during the occurence of a hazard event

  24. Risks and Risk Management Tasks during the occurence of a hazard event

  25. Risks and Risk Management Tasks during the occurence of a hazard event

  26. Risks and Risk Management Tasks during the occurence of a hazard event

  27. D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Early Warning & Response (short-term damage prevention) D A M A G E P R E V E N T I O N Exposure Reduction (long-term damage prevention) C R I S I S M ANAG EME NT e.g. infrastructures for warning decision, dissemination & evacuation e.g. hazard control, resettlement, building codes, hazard resistant infrastructures Hazard impact Risk Management Reconstruction(damage mitigation & long term damage prevention) Emergency Relief(damage mitigation) e.g. risk insurance & compensation, disaster resilient spatial planning e.g. contingency capacities and coordination C R I S I S M A N A G E M E N T

  28. For further information: Niklas Gebert UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSITY Hermann-Ehlers-Str. 10 53113 Bonn, Germany Tel.: + 49-228-815-0244 Fax: + 49-228-815-0299 e-mail: gebert@ehs.unu.edu www.bonn.unu.edu “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”Nelson Mandela

More Related