Term color class
white-on-red

Learning Labs: Disaster Risk Reduction Social Engineering: Strengthening Community Capacity in Volcanic Disaster-Prone Areas with Wajib Latih Penanggulangan Bencana (Mandatory Disaster Management Training)

In this interactive session, participants will learn the concept of communication for disaster risk reduction for communities in Disaster Risk Assessment through Mandatory Disaster Management Training programs. This good practice has been running for more than a decade as an effort to reduce disaster risk in an effort to form a community disaster-resilience carried out by the Geological Agency in synergy with the Regional Government, Non-Governmental Organizations, communities and volunteers at Merapi volcano.

Session Objectives

  • Introduce the concept of Mandatory Disaster Management Training
  • Explain the challenges of disaster communication in Disaster Risk Assessment
  • Understand the collaboration of disaster management parties in efforts to reduce disaster risk at Merapi Volcano
  • Help participants to take practical and strategic steps to start Mandatory Disaster Management Training
  • Support the government's long-term collaboration in disaster management from global to regional levels, the business sector, NGOs, communities and volunteers
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Geological Agency: Martanto martanto@live.com - Geological Agency: Agus Budi Santoso agus.santoso.081980@esdm.go.id
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Legian 1, 2
BNDCC 2- Mezzanine Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator

Subandriyo, M.Si

Speakers

Dr. Agus Budi Santoso

Noer Cholik

Learn more

Participants may benefit from bringing their own laptop (but not essential).

 

Where do we stand

  • Various disasters, both natural disasters and disasters caused by human actions, continue to occur in Indonesia, causing loss of community and government assets which increasingly burdens development. In dealing with geological disasters, the source of the threat in the form of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis cannot be prevented. Meanwhile, some of the people of this country still live in disaster-prone areas that could be in danger at any time.
  • The issuance of Law No. 24 of 2007 concerning Disaster Management has raised hopes for progress in disaster management. The law explicitly regulates the rights and protection for the community, but does not mention the obligations for people living in Disaster-Prone Areas. This is a form of deficiency that must be immediately filled with actions to enlighten the awareness of the community in Kawasan Rawan Bencana (KRB) / Disaster Prone Areas about their obligations to take part in disaster management and increase their ability to anticipate these threats through easy-to-understand disaster risk reduction programs.
  • Disasters are now the most real threat to a nation. If the threat to state sovereignty originating from other countries can be faced by implementing military service, then if the threat is in the form of a disaster, it can be implemented with Wajib Latih Penanggulangan Bencana (WLPB) or Mandatory Disaster Management Training.

Session Guiding Questions

  1. How to increase public knowledge of potential disaster threats and increase awareness of disaster risk?
  2. How to increase societal capacity through social engineering in disaster-prone areas?
Event bucket
Informal Programme

Scaling up local implementation of Sendai Framework for DRR

In the face of climate change threats and disaster crises, local communities are organizing, partnering and devising strategies to scale adaptation to climate change and disaster risk reduction actions that advance resilient development. These actions, and as the UN Commission on the Status of Women has recently reaffirmed the leadership of women's and girls in communities, are key to achieve progress on the implementation of global policy frameworks such as the Sendai Framework for DRR, the Paris Agreement and the SDGs, yet rarely do grassroots women, local communities and other local actors have a voice in the decisions that most affect them. We need to shift the status quo from current top-down approaches to a new model where local actors have greater decision making power, access to financial resources and institutional support to build resilience 

Partnerships between community-led organizations, local governments, multilateral and bilateral institutions and other development partners reinforces efforts to scale and accelerate the local implementation of national policies and global frameworks through resourcing community-based organizations, including women-led organizations, with flexible funds for learning, capacity building, innovation and integrating them into public decision making and policy spaces. Such collaboration also helps in empowering women and their communities and leads to transformative change. As community-based organizations are familiarized with and contribute to government mechanisms, policies and programs, and as government and other stakeholders become more familiar with the expertise in communities, collaborative plans emerge that accelerate progress in implementing the Sendai Framework.

Through a community of practice, in this session local actors and partners will share progress and lessons learned to enhance understanding of what is needed for effective, equitable locally led adaptation to climate change and disaster risk reduction, with a particular focus on partnerships and flexible financing.

Session objectives

  1. To discuss how local actors, including women-led, community -based organizations in poor communities, scale up and accelerate the implementation of the Sendai Framework
  2. To understand the challenges faced and opportunities for initiating and sustaining partnership between grassroots, community-based organizations, government and other institutional and financial partners to accelerate the implementation of the Sendai Framework
  3. To identify immediate entry points for collaboration
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Rocio Diaz Agero rocio.diaz-agero@huairou.org
Accessibility
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Bougainville & Orchid
BICC Ground Floor
Speakers

Speakers 

  • Violet Shivutse, Shibuye Community Health Workers
  • Claudia Herrera, Executive Director, CEPREDENAC
  • Suprayoga Hadi, Deputy, Policy Support for Human Development and Equity, Office of the Vice President, the Republic of Indonesia
  • Vincent Gainey, Climate Resilience Advisor at Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, UK Government
Learn more
  1. How are local actors contributing to the Sendai framework? What tools, capacities, practices, resources and leadership are they bringing?
  2. How are community-based organizations, local governments and other local actors partnering to scale DRR actions? What are the challenges and enablers for these partnerships?
  3. How can the government, multilateral, bilateral institutions and other institutional partners collaborate with community-based organizations and other local actors?
  4. How can investments reach the local level to scale up effective, inclusive DRR and resilience of vulnerable communities?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days

NGO Major Group Constituency Side Session

This session invites all civils society organizations to join the NGO Major Group constituency to discuss the SEM NGO Major Group official statement. The official statement sets out 8 key call to action points that civil society urge global decision makers and member states to focus on in order to achieve the targets set out in the Sendai Framework. It will also provide an opportunity for civil society organizations to come together, collaborate and strengthen participation in the NGO Major Group constituency of the SEM.

The past three years have shown that risk compounds risk, and that humanity is quickly approaching dangerous tipping points which require tremendous preventative action. To take but one example, in 2022, an estimated 274 million people will face hunger, conflict, and displacement as a result of climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic.

The NGO Major Group recognizes conflict and protracted crises as further examples of the systemic nature and global connectedness of risk. The risks we face are often the result of development priorities which do not reflect the true aspirations of people and communities.

This could be remedied by allocating appropriate resources for disaster risk reduction and risk-informed development with an emphasis on reaching the local level. Consensus on this matter should be translated into meaningful action.

Specifically, decision makers at global, national and local level are urged to champion (1) localisation, (2) risk-informed development and (3) collaboration for an all of society approach to disaster risk reduction.
 

Session Objectives 

  • Share the NGO Major Group declaration/ official statement that was submitted to UN DRR ahead of the Global Platform. This includes stocktaking on the Sendai Framework for Action and sets out key recommendations for global decision makers and members states moving forward
  • Open a space for civil society to discuss the eight key areas included in the NGO declaration / official statement
  • Provide the space for civil society to collaboration and strengthen coordination
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Becky Murphy: Rebecca.murphy@gndr.ord Daniel Perell: dperell@bic.org
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Room/Location
Bougainville & Orchid
BICC Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator

  1. Daniel Perell (Bahai international community) (SEM NGO MG Co-chair)

Speaker 

  • Becky Murphy, GNDR: Global Network of Civil Society Originations for Disaster Reduction, Policy Lead, co-chair of SEM NGO major group and co-focal point for SEM.
Learn more
  1. What do global decision makers and member states need to priorities to achieve the targets set out in the Sendai framework
  2. What practical examples and solutions can civil society provide
  3. How can civil society come together to collaborate and support the implementation and monitoring of the Sendai Framework

 

Event bucket
Preparatory Days
Organizing Team members
  • NGO Major Group of the UN DRR SEM
  • GNDR: Global Network of Civil Society Originations for Disaster Reduction

Displacement Constituency Session

This session seeks to raise awareness of disaster displacement and the need to integrate disaster displacement into local and national DRR strategies among GP22 participants. The Platform on Disaster Displacement, the Norwegian Refugee Council and partners will present the Platform’s DRR and Displacement Policy Brief and Key Messages and provide an overview of disaster displacement-related events taking place throughout the Platform. These include Ignite sessions, an exhibition on the Words into Action on disaster displacement guidance, checklist and elearning, and the engagement of artists, among others.

Session objectives

  • Provide an introduction to the topic of disaster displacement along with an overview of strides made in international, regional and national policy processes and frameworks.
  • Share key policy messages on disaster displacement.
  • Learn and coordinate how partners plan to engage in disaster displacement advocacy at GP22.
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Sarah Koeltzow, PDD Secretariat info@disasterdisplacement.org
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Auditorium
BICC Ground Floor
Parent - Conference
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator

  1. Nina Birkeland, NRC and Sarah Koeltzow, Platform on Disaster Displacement
Learn more

If you are interested to learn more about displacement and human mobility in the context of disasters and the adverse effects of climate change, please consider the following documents:

Where do we stand

Millions of people are displaced in the context of disasters around the world, every year. In 2020 alone, 30.7 million new displacements were related to disasters, according to estimates by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. Disaster displacement is multi-causal and driven by political, social, demographic, and environmental factors, including land degradation and unsustainable urbanization, among others. It occurs in the context of earthquakes and other geophysical hazards or is linked to extreme weather events, such as floods, storms and drought.

DRR strategies and practice play an important role in preventing and reducing risks associated with disaster displacement, strengthening resilience, and addressing the protection needs of people already displaced or at risk of being displaced. They should promote human-rights based approaches to disaster displacement and build coherence and partnerships across related policy areas, contributing to an effective use of knowledge and resources across silos.

This session will offer practical guidance for interested stakeholders on how to integrate disaster displacement and other related forms of human mobility into disaster risk reduction strategies and practice. It will also introduce the role of art in policy advocacy to raise awareness of all disaster risk management actors from the local to global level.

Session guiding questions

  • What is disaster displacement?
  • Why and how is disaster displacement relevant to DRR?
  • How is disaster displacement addressed so far in DRR policy and practice?
  • How can disaster displacement be integrated across policy areas such as climate change, DRR, development, human mobility and others?
  • Which global and regional level tools and guidance is available to support DRR policymakers implement the Sendai Framework related to disaster displacement?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days
Organizing Team members
  • Platform on Disaster Displacement and Norwegian Refugee Council

Whole of Society Approach in Implementing the Sendai Framework

Partnerships and all-of-society approaches lie at the heart of effective disaster risk reduction. Building resilience and promoting risk-informed decision-making and investment are collective challenges and responsibilities, which call upon a collaboration between governments, the United Nations and other international organizations and stakeholder groups at large.

The UNDRR Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism (SEM) was created in 2018, to support the implementation of Sendai Framework paragraph (36) and (48) which outlines the role of stakeholders in building resilience.

This session will showcase the commitment of the SEM stakeholders` group in implementing the Sendai Framework, and more specifically the SEM Action Plan. The panel will invite representatives of the SEM stakeholder groups to report on the outcome of the Stakeholder Forums constituency sessions, as well as their work on a whole of society approach in building resilience.

Session objectives

  1. Provide a space for SEM stakeholder groups to report on the outcome of the constituency focused sessions in the 2nd Stakeholder Forum.
  2. Showcase good practice in an all-of society approach in building resilience, and the benefit it brings to the wider society.

Online Attendance

This session will be live-streamed online. Note that it is live-streamlining and no active online participation. You can access the live streaming through this link: 

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Moa Herrgård, moa.m.herrgard@gmail.com
Accessibility
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Exhibition Gallery
BICC Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderators

  • Adella Indah Nurjanah, Student, Indonesia Mitra Muda Network
  • Moa Herrgård, United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism (UNDRR-SEM)

Speakers 

  • Jean-Baptiste Buffet, Head of Global Policy and Advocacy, United Cities and Local Governments
  • Mwanahamisi Singano, Senior Policy Lead, Women's Environment & Development Organization (WEDO)
  • Hans-Peter Teufers, Director of International Programs at the United Parcel Service (UPS) Foundation & ARISE Co-Chair
  • Natalia Ilieva, Asia Pacific Broadcasting Union
  • Terry Otieno, Global Focal Point, Sendai Children and Youth Stakeholder Group
  • Violet Shivutse, Chair, Huairou Commission
  • Phoebe Wafubwa Shikuku, DRR and Forecast Financing Advisor, The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) Africa Regional Office
  • Juan Angel de Gouveia, President, Latin American Network of Non-Governmental Organizations of Persons with Disabilities and Their Families (RIADIS)
  • Ghada Ahmadein, Program Manager, Arab Network for Environment and Development (READ)
  • Nina Birkeland, Senior Adviser on Disaster Displacement and Climate Change, Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)
  • Debora Comini, Regional Director for East Asia and the Pacific, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
Learn more

Guiding questions to the representatives of the constituency sessions:

  1. What was the outcome of your constituency session?
  2. Do you think it is important with an all of society approach in building resilience? Why?

Guiding questions for discussions:

  1. How can we support each other's work facilitating stakeholder engagement in building resilience?
  2. What role do you see that stakeholders have in implementing the Sendai Framework?
  3. What role do you see that SEM should play in facilitating the stakeholders engagement in implementing the Sendai Framework?
  4. Do you think it is important with an all of society approach in building resilience? Why?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days

Key Messages Report Back from Parallel Sessions

To reach a sustainable and resilient world for all it is of importance that there is a policy coherence between all relevant policies at all levels, from local to international level.

The UNDRR Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism (UNDRR-SEM) is thereby engaging not just in solely disaster risk reduction avenues, but in all-hazard knowledge generation, climate change policy development, disaster risk financing and most importantly community empowerment. We have seen that resilience is dependent upon the capacity of a community to respond in times of crisis.

During the first half of the 2nd day of the 7th GPDRR Stakeholder Forum, its participants took part in interactive and outcome oriented smaller parallel sessions. The session will serve as an opportunity for all to learn of the outcomes from these parallel sessions.

Session Objectives 

  •  Ensure that the knowledge generated from the Stakeholder Forum parallel sessions is shared among all stakeholder groups attendees and other participants in the Stakeholder Forum.
  • Reduce the potential of silos among DRR stakeholders, and ensure coherence between actions of stakeholders engaged in implementing the Sendai Framework.
  • Demonstrate that while we, as the stakeholders of DRR, may have specific areas of interest, we are working for a common goal, namely ensuring that all parts of society have enhanced capacity of managing striking hazards and that the risks of disasters to occur are minimised through structural changes and integration of risk-reduction in all development plans.

Online Attendance

This session will be live-streamed online. Note that it is live-streamlining and no active online participation. You can access the live streaming through this link: 

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Daniel Perell, dperell@bic.org
Accessibility
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Exhibition Gallery
BICC Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Ms. Mareike Bentfeld, Advisor, Global Initiative on Disaster Risk Management (GIDRM), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ

  • Ms. Elham Youssefian, Inclusive Humanitarian Action and Disaster Risk Reduction Advisor, International Disability Alliance

Speakers 

  • Ms.Alinne Martinez, Focal Point, Young Scientists Platform on Disaster Risk Reduction
  • Ms. Antonia Yulo Loyzaga, President, National Resilience Council (NRC) of the Philippines
  • Ms. Maite Rodriguez, Regional Coordinator, Guatemala Foundation and Women and Habitat Network for Latin America and the Caribbean
  • Mr. Aashish Kullar, Consultant, The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
  • Ms.Jekulin Lipi, Young Scientist, Sendai Children and Youth Stakeholder Grup & SEM Focal Point
  • Ms. Sophie Rigg, Senior Climate and Resilience Adviser at Action Aid UK & European Representative on the Global Board of GNDR
  • Ms. Paola Albrito, Chief of Branch, Intergovernmental Processes, Interagency Cooperation and Partnership, The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
     
Learn more
  1. What are the main outcomes from the parallel session? What are the next steps or objectives you are planning to pursue?
  2. How do you believe that we can learn from each other, and bridge the gap of DRR actions in different technical fields where SEM and its members engage?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days

Next Gen, Pro-Planet Media: Tapping the potentials of New Media for Disaster and Climate Resilience 

This online side event will: 

  • Relook at changing forms of communication among stakeholders that are required for planning and evaluation, leaving nobody behind - children, youth across all generations, women and gender minorities, PWDs, ethnic minorities, indigenous peoples, urban and rural poor, and so on. 
  • Bring old and new methods of advertising and media together, from TV and radio to vlogs and podcasts, even to the up-and-coming Metaworld. We believe, if there is a future - it is together. 
  • Analyze the role of social media as a powerful and revolutionary instrument for making DRR, Climate Change, and SDG decision-making more inclusive, participative, and empowering. 

Session objectives

  1. To discuss and evaluate the various media's involvement in disaster risk management and climate action at the global, regional, national, and local levels. 
  2. To identify significant knowledge & information gaps and possibilities to increase the role of media as a powerful and  transformative tool in making disaster risk reduction and climate action more inclusive and wide. 
  3. To determine the most effective ways for media platforms to return power to marginalized groups and provide space and venues to share their stories in their voices, free of bias. 
  4. To make a collective commitment from media partners, both private, public with state owned, the UN, and youth & children, to  improve new media collaboration for disaster risk reduction and   climate action. 
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Anish Shrestha- anish.giyc@unmgcy.org Sonika Poudel- sonika.poudel@unmgcy.org
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Singaraja Hall 2
BNDCC 1-1st Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  1. Ms. Pamela Mejia, Asia TV Studios 
  2. Mr. Anish Shrestha, Global Focal Point (GFP) on DRR, Sendai Stakeholders Children and Youth Group (SWSCYG) of Major Group for Children and Youth (MGCY) 

Speakers 
 

1. Reserach and Knowledge Sector

  • Ms. Minh Tran, Stockholm Environment Institute

2. Indigenous Youth Advocate  

  • Ms. Chandra Tripura, Asian Indigenous Youth Platform 

3. Government / States

  • Ms. Shaila Sahid, Disaster Climate Change Support Unit, CWIS-FSM Support Cell, Department of Public Health Engineering, Government of Bangladesh 

4. Youth DRR and Climate Organizer & Advocate 

  • Ms. Jekulin Lipi Saikia, Sendai Stakeholders Children and Youth Group (SSCYG) - DRR Working Group of Major Group for Children and Youth (MGCY)  

5. Media Practitioner 

  • Ms. Chehek Praful Bilgi, Youth Cinematographer and Multimedia Editor  

* Video presentation by AsiaTV Studios

Learn more

The event will focus on: 

  • Policy context including the Dhaka Declaration in its relation to the SFDRR implementation. 
  • Good practices of media-inclusive disaster risk reduction and the way forward.  

Where do we stand 

Social media can play a powerful and transformative tool to make decision-making in DRR, Climate Change, and SDGs more inclusive, participatory, and empowering in today’s age. Thus, the thematic focus of the side event links to the GPDRR themes, ‘Stocktaking and accelerating process in achieving the goal and the targets of the Sendai Framework’ and ‘Accelerating and integrating disaster risk management to SDGs and climate action’. The Media is an effective and important stakeholder and communication medium in DRR and Climate Action as it can enhance people’s perception through time-based and scientific information dissemination. Media helps inclusive outreach to farthest left-behind with addressing theme Leave no one behind: Investing in local action and empowering the most at-risk. New Digital media has a role in all key phases of disaster risk management, from preparedness to response, recovery, & prevention/ mitigation. The role of the media has been perceived strongly in addressing the COVID-19 global pandemic, making it relevant to the GPDRR theme, ‘Social and economic recovery from COVID-19 for all.’ 

Session guiding questions

  • What role does the media play at the global, regional, national, and local levels in disaster risk management and climate action? 
  • What are the important knowledge and information gaps, as well as the opportunities for media to play a more effective and revolutionary role in disaster risk reduction and climate action? 
  • What are the most effective ways for media platforms to provide marginalized groups more power and give them room and venues to tell their experiences in their own words, free of bias? 
Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members

Asia-Africa TV, ASEAN Youth DRR Network, Youth For Environment Education And Development Foundation (YFEED Foundation), Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), Sendai Stakeholders Children and Youth Group (SSCYG), Major Group for Children and Youth Group (MGCY) and Disaster Climate Change Support Unit, CWIS-FSM Support Cell, Department of Public Health Engineering, Government of Bangladesh 

Accelerating disability inclusion in Disaster Risk Reduction

Disasters can affect everyone. However, individuals that belong to the most at-risk groups such as persons with disabilities face higher risks and are disproportionately affected due to a wide range of barriers, including stigma and discrimination. 

CBM, alongside its partners is promoting disability inclusive disaster risk reduction globally, including facilitating organizations of people with disabilities (OPDs) to participate in and lead DRR activities.

At this event, four panelists will present good practices and success stories from their roles in ensuring disability inclusion in DRR in a Covid-19 impacted world. 

The panel will:  

  • stress the importance of the inclusion and participation of persons with disabilities in humanitarian and development activities  
  • highlight examples of persons with disabilities acting as important DRR resources and change agents within their communities  
  • promote efforts for mainstreaming disability inclusion in DRR.

Session objectives

  • Present key insights from the field from several contexts and identifying good practice as well as issues of concern in implementing DRR from perspectives of an OPD, a mainstream civil society network, government, the United Nations, academia, and a specialist organisation. 
  • Encourage OPDs through success stories to claim their right for participation in DRR. 
  • Set an example for a range of stakeholders on how to engage key players in disaster risk reduction programming and implementation for robust disability inclusion. 
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Mr. Talal Waheed Talal.waheed@cbm.org Ms. Shivangi Chavda Shivangi.chavda@gndr.org
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Pecatu Hall
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Talal Waheed-Global Advisor Disability Inclusive DRR 
  • CBM Christoffel- Blindenmission Christian Blind Mission e.V.  

Speakers

  • Dr Shaun Grech, Honorary Associate Professor in DIDRR at IDEA, University of Cape Town, South Africa & Senior Academic Consultant in DIDRR (CBM) (a joint initiative of CBM & UCT). Topic: “DIDRR: Launching of Critical insights and good practices from the field: (learnings from Bangladesh, Haiti, Niger, The Philippines, and Zimbabwe) 
  • Dr. Stefanie Dannenmann -Di Palma - External Relations Officer- United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) 
    Topic: UNDRR and disability inclusion - our commitment for ensuring DIDRR

  • Ms. Nogining Armelle Almerique - Chair person of an OPD: Coordinating Unit of Associations of Persons with Disabilities (CUAPWD), Cameroon 
    Topic: Exclusion crisis in disaster risk reduction - our challenges and learning

  • Ms. Shivangi Chavda, Senior Regional Lead - Asia & Europe Global Network of Civil Society Organizations for Disaster Reduction 
    Topic: Views from the front line – are persons with disabilities present in DRR related decision-making processes? A reality check on accessibility and inclusion of DRR 

  • Mr. Bui Quang Huy, Vice Director - Disaster Management Policy and Technology Center, Vietnam Disaster management Authority,Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development – Vietnam. 

Learn more

This section provides important information for those planning to attend the  side event: 

Where do we stand  

Understanding disaster risk is a fundamental and essential aspect of disaster risk management and the promotion of resilience. Evidence from recent decades shows that disasters are indicators of extremely complex processes of risk generation and consolidation. The Sendai Framework supports this approach and promotes the development of activities aimed at better understanding disaster risk. 


Session guiding questions

  1. What is the X methodology and what approaches does it adopt? 
  2. What are the types of cases in which the methodology can be applied? 
  3. What opportunities exist for the application of the methodology in the period 2022-2025? 
Event bucket
Informal Programme

Principles for Resilient Infrastructure - A global standard for the improvement of infrastructure resilience

While there are many discussions focusing on the challenges of infrastructure resilience, this side event will offer solutions for practitioners to achieving outcomes of infrastructure resilience. 

The purpose of the side event is to present the latest version of the Principles for Resilient Infrastructure and to provide practical solutions for infrastructure resilience to all levels of government, institutions, donors, investors, owners, regulators, operators, designers and contractors, service providers, and international organisations by demonstrating how the Principles and other tools can be implemented to contribute to positive economic, social and environmental outcomes. 

During this event, various stakeholders along with our co-organizers will discuss how the Principles and resilient infrastructure tools such as CDRI’s lexicon, OECD’s good governance for critical infrastructure resilience and ICE’s knowledge platforms can be applicable and implemented for specific sectors and industries, as well as holistically to achieve infrastructure resilience. 

Session objectives

With the overall intention of raising awareness and understanding on resilience of infrastructure, the objectives of the side event are to:  

  1. Present the Principles for Resilient Infrastructure Report 
  2. Elaborate on the concept of ‘net resilience gain’ 
  3. Illustrate how to implement the Principles for Resilient Infrastructure  
  4. Introduce policy instruments and tools for resilient infrastructure (CDRI’s lexicon, OECD’s Good Governance for Critical Infrastructure Resilience and ICE’s knowledge platforms) 

Registration 

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Liz Varga l.varga@ucl.ac.uk
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Mengwi 6, 7, 8
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Abhilash Panda- Deputy Chief, Intergovernmental processes, Interagency cooperation and Partnerships, UNDRR  

Speakers

  • Liz Varga, Professor of Complex Systems, Head of UCL’s Infrastructure Systems Institute, UCL  
  • David A. Smith, ICE Sustainable Resilient Infrastructure CAB Chair | Senior Vice President, Director of Strategy, Stantec 
  • Nestor Alfonzo Santamaria, Policy Advice & Research, High Level Risk Forum, OECD 
  • Neha Bhatia, Senior Specialist- Knowledge Management, CDRI 
  • Ajay Makhija, Team Leader, Infrastructure Resilience | Planning & Sector Partnerships, National Emergency Management Agency, New Zealand  
  • George Baldwin, Climate Resilience & Strategy Consulting Director, Consulting Solutions, Marsh Advisory 
  • Ravi Sinha, Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
Learn more

Today, more people than ever are dependent on the services delivered by critical infrastructure systems, such as healthcare, education, energy, transport, telecommunications and water. Infrastructure systems are the backbone of modern economy, and critical infrastructure resilience is essential to develop sustainably. The COVID-19 pandemic and extreme weather events have highlighted potential vulnerabilities and exposure of our infrastructure systems across the globe.
The ‘Principles for Resilient Infrastructure’ have been developed to support implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals. The Principles for Resilient Infrastructure addresses the challenge of current infrastructure planning, financing, design, development and operation not fully taking into account either the interdependent nature of infrastructure and services, or the increasingly complex nature of risks and the cascading impacts that a disaster can have across the whole infrastructure system. It also addresses the lack of understanding of what “resilient infrastructure” actually means and entails in terms of policy, planning, and practical measures by creating a common language and understanding of the issue.  

Session guiding question

  1. How can the Principles and key actions be implemented by specific stakeholder groups to address infrastructure resilience? 
  2. What are the common misconceptions of resilient infrastructure and how can the Principles and other policy instruments contribute to creating a better understanding of resilient infrastructure?  
  3. How can we ensure that investments are de-risked by factoring resilience into investment decisions?  
  4. How can we urgently push the infrastructure resilience agenda and how can we promote the ‘net resilience gain’ concept’?  
Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members
  • University College London (UCL) 
  • Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) 
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)  
  • Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) .

Urban multi-hazard risk policy transitions for addressing systemic risk 

The Sendai Framework urges national and subnational governments to address the understanding, quantification and appropriate policies and interventions to manage systemic risk. To open a constructive dialogue on entry points for decision making and action arising from work on multi-hazard urban risk reduction, this session brings together a diversity of perspectives drawing on the experiences of various stakeholders learning from the UKRI-GCRF Tomorrow’s Cities Hub.

The session advocates that a better understanding of systemic risk can be achieved by promoting people-centred decision making that accounts for the dynamic interactions between multiple hazards, vulnerabilities, capacities, and impacts across space. Our collective experience confirms that this framing enables policy actors to address the challenge of mainstreaming multi-hazard risk reduction into urban planning and development. This primarily consists of opening spaces for actors to engage in collaborative processes that bring local voices and science into policymaking at both city and national levels. 

Session objectives

This session’s objectives include: 

  1.  Attempt to understand systemic risk from an urban, multi-hazard perspective, including viewpoints from academia, professional associations, national governments and international organisations.   
  2. Consider ways to support the management of dynamic multi-hazard risk in cities and urban areas.  
  3.  Discuss innovative governance frameworks for mainstreaming multi-hazard risk into urban planning and development toward empowering the most at risk. 

Registration

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Carmine Galasso c.galasso@ucl.ac.uk María Evangelina Filippi evangelina.filippi@bristol.ac.uk Mark Pelling mark.pelling@kcl.ac.uk
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Interpretation (Language)
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Mengwi 6, 7, 8
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  1. María Evangelina Filippi-Senior Research Associate, University of Bristol, UK 

Speaker

  • Elisa Sevilla -Professor, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador 
  • Ramesh Guragain-Deputy Executive Director, National Society for Earthquake Technology (NSET), Nepal 
  • Anil Pokhrel-Chief Executive, National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority (NDRRMA), Nepal 
  • Maryia Markhvida -Disaster Risk Management Expert Consultant, World Bank; Lecturer, Stanford University, US
Image
Learn more

Read this section to learn more about multi-hazard risk assessment approaches and governance frameworks for DRR. Lessons learnt and to be discussed arise from the UKRI-GCRF Tomorrow’s Cities Hub.  

Where do we stand

The concept of systemic risk raises both challenges and opportunities for the overarching understanding of disaster risk and its management, nowhere more urgently in the current global, rapid urbanisation. Multi-hazard perspectives can provide a nuanced set of lessons and action approaches through which to better understand and reduce systemic risk, especially in the context of rapid growth and expansion of cities and urban areas. At the heart of these lessons is the recognition that the translation of complex and dynamic understandings of multiple, interacting risks into practice requires innovation in data and its management, related analytical and communicative techniques, governance frameworks and financing mechanisms, in particular toward mobilising the principle of leaving no one behind. Understanding, governing and investing are three of the four priorities of the Sendai Framework, and systemic risk needs to be mainstreamed into each of these dimensions if we want to make progress in reaching the targets of this and other global frameworks by 2030. 

Session guiding questions

  1. How is systemic risk understood or approached in your organisation/your work? 
  2. How can a multi-hazard perspective better inform our understanding of systemic risk? What are the implications in terms of data, analytical modelling, governance and communication? 
  3. What are the specific challenges and opportunities that rapid urbanisation pose for the management of systemic risk?  
  4. How can consideration of systemic risk be more effectively incorporated into urban development or urban planning practice? 
Event bucket
Informal Programme