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Exhibitions to support the GP2022 at the Bali Collection and Art Bali areas

Three exhibitions to support the 7th Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction event are held in the Bali Collection and Art Bali areas from 23-28 May 2022. The exhibitions are as follows:

 

RUMAH RESILIENSI INDONESIA / INDONESIA HOUSE OF RESILIENCE GLOBAL PLATFORM FOR DISASTER RISK REDUCTION 2022

Indonesia House of Resilience (RRI) is part of the communication strategy of the Indonesian government as the host of the 7th GPDRR in 2022. The Indonesian House of Resilience will be held concurrently with and complementing the 2022 GPDRR, namely from 23 to 28 May 2022. The venue is at the Art Bali Building - Bali Collection Area, Jl. kw. Nusa Dua Resort, Benoa, Kec. Kuta Sel., Badung Regency, Bali 80361.

As the host of the event, Indonesia's narrative is to show leadership, jointly promote recovery from the pandemic crisis, the impacts of climate change and disaster events, through better risk management. At the same time, as a momentum for a long journey to resilience that combines awareness of the increasingly complex threats of disaster hazards.  All members of the delegation and guests are invited to experience a concentric journey from the outer circle to the inside:

  1. Departing from a RESILIENT COMMUNITY. Celebrating the spirit and culture of resilient Indonesians, those who grow stronger in the face of risk, respond to disasters, and recover stronger from impacts. Presenting booths for communities, groups, technology sectors and industries as well as SMEs that have resilience stories to share.
  2. Through the PENTAHELIX COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY. Collaborative risk management as stipulated in the Master Plan for Indonesian Disaster Management 2020 - 2044, featuring exhibition booths, stages, and a range of activities from government ministries and agencies, civil society: national and local DRR Forums, civil society organizations and non-governmental organizations, volunteer corps, and C 20 groups, as well as international partners working in Indonesia.
  3. Towards the SESSIONS TOWARDS GLOBAL RESILIENCE, is an official meeting to discuss and formulate a new world order for a “recover stronger together” both from the pandemic and disaster risk, and exhibitions and the Ignite stage which have been prepared and arranged by UNDRR.

The establishment and operation of an Indonesian House of Resilience complex which is part and complements the implementation of the 7th GPDRR in 2022 by the Government of Indonesia which consists of:

  • Market Place: contains the achievements of the Disaster Risk Reduction program in Indonesia (partners and pentahelix)
  • Resilience Stage: delivery of results/achievements of DRR programs in Indonesia (Yogyakarta Declaration – Partners – Pentahelix), 30 min/segment (presentation + discussion), up to 10 segments
  • Talk show: interactive dialogue of several partners/pentahelix (30-60 minutes per talk show)
  • Panel Exhibition: highlight - brief presentation of products/programs/achievements (15 minutes)

For more information on the Indonesia House of Resilience, see here.

 

ADEXCO EXHIBITION

The efforts to protect nations from the threat of disaster include encouraging business communities to enhance the capability of disaster management, as well as to enlighten the public to prepare for various disasters.

In order to make this happen, Asia Disaster Management & Civil Protection Expo and Conference (ADEXCO) 2022 cooperate with BNPB, aiming to create a new opportunity to demonstrate disaster risk reduction efforts of Indonesia and Asia region.

Currently, countries in Asia do their best in terms of disaster management development by investing in disaster equipment for the preparedness, response and recovery. Through ADEXCO 2022, we urge communities from the government, academician, industry, media and community to be aware of and prepare disaster management. Preparation in the form of investment and education is a must to have strong resilience in order to face the upcoming and unknown disaster.

ADEXCO 2022 will be held alongside the seventh session of the Global Platform (GP2022) from 23 – 28 May 2022 in ABBC Building, Nusa Dua – Bali. The tagline of ADEXCO exhibition is Reinforce Our Future, From Indonesia To the World.

For more information on the ADEXCO, see here, and register for an on-site visit here.

 

The Exhibition of SMEs products: THE SPIRIT OF INDONESIA

The Exhibition of SMEs products: THE SPIRIT OF INDONESIA will be held on May 25th -28th, 2022, 11.am-9.00pm. The purpose of the exhibition is to empower all SMEs as part of disaster risk reduction efforts, foster partnership and to build resilience and support sustainability. The participants of this event is expected to further expand their markets, develop new ideas, to network to have a chance at gathering wider range of supports. The exhibition of SMEs products will be showcased in Bali Collection and the hotels where the delegates stay. A comprehensive showcase in line with GPDRR’s theme titled The Spirit of Indonesia will be divided into 4 (four) zoning areas:

  1. Zone 1 The Rising Phoenix : A mini museum featuring some great disasters that took place in Indonesia to illustrate their devastating impact to the communities and the country as a whole.
  2. Zone 2 Memento of Indonesia : Featuring eco-friendly and green products and other champions products of Indonesian SMEs.
  3. Zone 3 Taste of Indonesia : A whole spectrum of indulgence in food and beverages, from local heritage as well as standardized manufactured goods.
  4. Zone 4 Local Rhythm : Celebrating cultural and musical performance as well as entertainment, which offers the chance to personally see Indonesia’s vast cultural performances.

Participants

  1. Ministry of Cooperatives and SMEs: 50 SMEs (Bali Collection) & 30 SMEs (Westin Hotel, Melia Hotel, Conrad Hotel)
  2. Ministry of Tourism and Creative Economy: 140 SMEs (virtual)
  3. Ministry of Youth and Sports: 15 SMEs
  4. Ministry of Industry: 10 SMEs
  5. Ministry of Trade:  8  SMEs

Presenting more than 200 Indonesian SMEs from Bali and other provinces in Indonesia, various sectors ranging from wellness, eco-friendly product, zero waste based products, paintings and handmade products from women entrepreneurs, SMEs impacted by disasters, and handicapped children.

Ministry of Tourism and Creative Economy shows the Creative Product Planogram - a display installation showcasing curated creative products in response to the Covid-19 outbreak in promoting Indonesia creative products better to larger customers number without having to pool too much crowds. The planogram comprises information on 140 creative products from all around Indonesia representing the Fashion, Craft, and Culinary sub-sectors related to disaster resilience, both from the producer side, location, or function of the products. Each product in this planogram is provided with a QR Code that allows you to visit the official accounts of creative actors in our local marketplace or other digital marketing platforms. Payments are designed to be cashless, and products will be delivered straight to the desired location through local logistic service.

For more information on the Spirit of Indonesia exhibition, see here and here.

Conference content type
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Off
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Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
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Primary floor language
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Informal Programme

The last mile syndrome – how to reach all citizens with vital information during crisis

This GP2022 Learning Labs will allow to exchange best practices from all continents, shared by participants (media professionals and journalists) coming from regions at risk of climate change huge impact.

  • Regional Experiences of early alert systems
  • Examples of crisis impacting on media infrastructures across regions
  • Examples of communication in times of crisis

Session Objectives

  1. Learning from various best (and worst) practices try to build up a sharable methodology across the regions
  2. Build a network of experiences and best practices across regions
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Jeanette Elsworth jeanette.elsworth@un.org
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Bandung Room
BICC First Floor
Speakers

Moderator

  • Giacomo Mazzone -journalist expert in DRR

Speaker 

  • Natalia Ilieva-Head of staff of ABU General Secretary
Learn more

DRR Media Hub

Communicating through media about disaster risk is a fundamental and essential aspect of disaster risk management and of the promotion of resilience. One of the crucial issues of these last years (where the natural hazards have multiplied in number and magnitude) has been how to reach all citizens, even those the less connected. Media professionals are the best placed figures to reach all of the citizenship and to vehiculate them valuable message to save lives.

Session guiding questions

  1. In the given best practices, which ones have proved to be the most efficient ?
  2. Can their methodology and approaches be replicated elsewhere ?
  3. Which are the requisites in which the methodology can be applied?
  4. Which specific methodology in the media field could be defined for the period 2022-2025?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days
Organizing Team members
  • Media group in partnership with WBU (ABU, ASBU, CBU, AUB, etc.)

Women Leadership in Implementation of the Sendai Framework

Women Major Group is one of the UNDRR’s 17 stakeholder constituencies that works to mobilize and support women’s engagement in the UNDRR processes and ensure policies and decisions center realities and agency of women and girls in all their diversities and alter relations of power to end structural inequalities which exacerbate vulnerability. The 7th global platform is the first UNDRR in-person gathering since the pandemic and the last before the midterm review of the Sendai framework. The Women Major Group is taking the opportunity, to convene members of the constituency, partners, and allies to reflect and strategize toward Sendai midterm review.

The women’s major group at UNDRR aims to host this session to reconnect with constituency members, partners, and, allies during the 7th Global platform in Bali by the reflecting on the realities of women in disasters and their engagement in the policy process while strategizing and developing a concrete yearlong plans towards Sendai midterm reviews.

Session objectives

The session is designed to deliver

  • A comprehensive position paper of the Women Major Group with policy and programme demands for GPDRR and Sendai Review Process to consider
  • An engagement plan of the Women Major Group in Sendai midterm review
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Mwanahamisi Singano, mwanahamisi@wedo.org
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Bandung Room
BICC First Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Mwanahamisi Singano, Global policy lead - WEDO

Speakers

  • Farah Kabir, Country Director, ActionAid Bangladesh
  • Lori Johnston, indigenous leader,
  • Prof. Bertha Cecilia Garcia -Titular Researcher National University of Tumbes
Learn more

The world continues to be ravaged by disasters. The economic, human, and environmental costs of disasters continue to rise across the world. The least developing countries and communities at the periphery of power—with limited or no resources to respond to and recover from disasters—carry the disproportionate burden of the impacts. Disaster robs dignity, erodes development gains and pushes people and communities into systemic cycles of poverty. Disasters exacerbate the systemic inequalities and human rights violations faced by women and girls. Yet, according to the GP2019 co-chair summary report, “the commitments towards the inclusive approach to disaster risk reduction have not yet sufficiently translated into action.”

Session guiding questions

  1. What are the impacts of disaster on women and girls?
  2. What role do women play in their communities to build resilience and reduce disaster risks?
  3. To what extent women and girls are engaged in the DRR policy processes and implementation programs?
  4. What should Women Major Group at DRR do to effectively engage and influence the midterm review of the Sendai framework.
Event bucket
Preparatory Days

Constituency session: Grassroots Academy and Community Practitioner’s Platform for Resilience: Leveraging the Mid-Term Review for Aggregating Evidence, Learning and Movement-Building

As the convenor of the Community Practitioners Platform for Resilience (CPPR), the Huairou Commission will facilitate dialogue among the representatives of grassroots organizations from impoverished and hazard-prone communities participating in the Global Platform in Bali.

Organized grassroots groups have leveraged their own expertise, resources and social capital to introduce solutions for reducing disaster risk and building gender-just resilient communities.

The Sendai Mid-Term Review is positioned as a valuable organizing tool that can be used for collective learning and collaborative planning as leaders of grassroots organizations take stock of their contributions and the progress and challenges observed more broadly.

This session will advance a collaborative process for reviewing progress since Sendai. Grassroots experiences in innovating and scaling up DRR will be presented, plans for using the MTR to aggregate evidence will be considered and strategies for advocacy and outreach to partners throughout our time at Global Platform will be discussed.

Session objectives

  1. Share grassroots practices and lessons from local implementation of the Sendai framework for DRR
  2. Propose approaches to aggregating evidence of grassroots-led implementation of SFDRR for the Mid Term Review
  3. Identify opportunities to scale-up partnerships for accelerating local implementation of SFDRR
  4. Develop shared agenda for for the MTR and advocacy at the Global Platform
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Suranjana Gupta suranjana.gupta@huairou.org
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Hibiscus & Frangipani
BICC Ground Floor
Speakers

Moderator

  • Suranjana Gupta-Senior Advisor - Community Resilience, Huairou Commission

Speakers

  • Ibu Roniatun-Yakkum Emergency Unit, Indonesia
  • Bindu Shrestha- Community Women’s Forum, Nepal and Regional Representative to Huairou Commission Governing Council
  • Theresa Makwara- Zimbabwe Parents of Handicapped Children (ZPHCA), Zimbabwe
  • Ma Theresa Carampatana- Slumdwellers International (Philippines)
Learn more

Impoverished urban, rural and indigenous communities, and women in particular, are among the worst affected by disasters and climate change, yet locally-led grassroots organizations continue to be marginalized from risk governance, funding and technical support.

Despite these disadvantages, organized grassroots groups have leveraged our own expertise, resources and social capital to introduce integrated solutions for reducing disaster risk and building resilience. We have organized as women-led networks, cooperatives, federations of self-help groups, care-givers alliances and other kinds of community-based organizations.

We have nurtured partnership with local and national government, philanthropy, bilateral and multilateral donor partners and technical institutions and have seen promising examples that can be scaled-up for greater and more sustained progress in implementation of the Sendai Framework.

Grassroots organizations have deep traditions of peer learning and collaborative planning and are committed to using the Mid Term Review as an opportunity for evidence generation, reflection, planning and movement building. We look to national and local governments to include us in their own Mid-Term Review processes.

Session guiding questions

  1. What practices have proven effective for reducing disaster risk and building resilience?
  2. What are the prospects for scaling up good practices/ what partnerships and alliances and organizing is needed?
  3. How can we use the Mid Term Review to aggregate evidence and build momentum?
  4. What can we achieve at the Global Platform?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days
Organizing Team members
  • Huairou Commission
  • Slum Dwellers International

Scaling up early warning and early action – using art to inspire change

This in person and online side event will: 

  • Engage the audience through interactive theatre to gain different perspectives in the challenges and opportunities in early warning and early action  
  • Explore themes such as relationships, multi-faceted nature of vulnerability, governance arrangements to address systemic risk in DRR and climate change adaptation, gender equality and women’s leadership, and enabling elements for effective early warning and early action  
  • Provoke thought, discussion and understanding to meet the UN SG’s alerts for all in five years  

Session objectives

  1. Raise awareness on the importance of a multi-stakeholder coordination and inclusive and gender sensitive approaches to EW EA efforts to foster trust, support action, and achieve positive impact;  
  2. Jointly explore challenges and solutions in simulated ‘threat environments’; share good practice; 
  3. Overall the session aims to create a fun, interactive, and inspirational learning environment to deepen understanding and exchange on the connections between early warning / early action and promote social change to enhance the effectiveness of these efforts. 
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Erica Allis eallis@wmo.int
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Singaraja Hall 2
BNDCC 1-1st Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Pen Cabot-Director, Walker Institute, The University of Reading 

Speakers

  • Dr. Johan Stander, Director, WMO
  • Dr. Dwikorita Karnawati-Director of BMKG 
  • Litizia Rosano -UNESCAP 
  • IFRC or UN Women (TBC)  
Image
Learn more

Willingness to explore challenges from a different point of view and help shift perceptions, most critically one’s own, to enable actions for a personal and wider transformation towards a more just and sustainable world. 

Where do we stand 

Extreme weather, climate and water events are becoming more frequent and intense in many parts of the world as a result of climate change. More of us are exposed than ever before to multiple related hazards, which are themselves evolving as a result of population growth, urbanization and environmental degradation.

One-third of the world’s people, mainly in least developed countries and small island developing states, are still not covered by early warning systems.  In Africa, it is even worse: 60 per cent of people lack coverage. 

Session guiding questions

  1. What elements enable effective early warning and early action? What relationships, systems and information flows are critical? 
  2. What is the WMO Global Multi-Hazard Alert System Framework? 
  3. How do we work together to ensure effective early warning systems for all in five years? 
Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members
  • WMO 
  • The University of Reading’s Interdisciplinary Climate Research Institute 
  • IFRC 
  • UNESCAP 

Women Pushing for Transformation – A Dialogue on the Future of SDG, DRR, and Planetary Health

This event is face-to-face, highly interactive and moderated by a leading CNN Indonesia Anchor Ms. Amelia Yachya, in a hard talk style with three leading women experts in health, disaster management, humanitarian assistance and sustainability. It will also connect with and introduce the need for a broader overarching planetary health approach in how communities, organizations and governments prepare for, mitigate the impact of, and adapt to current and future risks, including pandemics, natural hazards and climate change. It will highlight the role of women in pushing for transformation.

The moderator and speakers will interact with the audience, by both posing and answering questions with the aim that the collective wisdom and knowledge in the room can support articulation of a series of recommendations that will support the themes of GPDRR2022.

The proposed agenda for the event will be:

  • Opening remarks – (5minutes)
  • Presentation of what planetary health is and why it’s being brought into GPDRR – the connections may not be obvious at first sight (10minutes)
  • Dialogue with speakers-(40 minutes)
  • Interactive session with participants (15 minutes)
  • Closing summaries from discussants and moderator (5 minutes)

This side event is linked to two main themes (2,3) and two cross cutting themes (2,3) and aims to connect them.

Discussions will center on the importance of inter-sectoral approaches, going beyond current inter- and intra-governmental processes to include a holistic planetary health approach to address current and future colliding challenges.

Session objectives

  • Support GPDRR2022’s focuses on disaster risk governance, COVID-19  recovery and leaving no one behind by exploring the need for a refreshed paradigm which puts the health of people and the planet at the center of our deliberations.
  • Highlight current inequalities and inequities arising from the pandemic and uneven access to vaccine distribution and their relationship with heightened exposure to disaster risk.
  • Explore how shifting to a planetary health approach to disaster risk management, including pandemic management, can support achievement of the goal and targets of the Sendai Framework and the 2030 SDG agenda.
  • Demonstrate that the leadership, skills and capacities exist to achieve this transformation.
  • Develop relevant recommendations to be considered as part of the outcome of GPDRR2022.
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Mr. Joel Myhre - jmyhre@pdc.org Mr. Oliver-Lacey Hall - oliverh@sunway.edu.my
Format
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Pecatu Hall
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator:

  • Ms. Amelia Yachya, CNN Indonesia

Speakers 

  • Prof. Tan Sri Dr. Jemilah Mahmood (Executive Director of Sunway Centre for Planetary Health Malaysia, former Senior Advisor on Public Health for Prime Minister of Malaysia, former Under Secretary-General of IFRC, Chief of World Humanitarian Summit, former Chief of UNFPA Humanitarian Branch, and Founder of Mercy Malaysia)
  • Ms. Adelina Kamal (Associate Senior Fellow of ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute, former Executive Director of ASEAN Humanitarian Assistance or AHA Centre, former Director for Sustainable Development and Head of Disaster Management & Humanitarian Assistance of ASEAN Secretariat)
  • Dr. Erin Hughey (Director of Global Operations, Pacific Disaster Center, and former Managing Editor: Risk, Hazard & Crisis in Public Policy at the Policy Studies Organization)
Learn more

Learn more about the Sunway Centre for Planetary Health, ISEAS and the Pacific Disaster Center here-

Where do we stand

Disaster risk reduction is a critical component of disaster management and has gained prominence in international discourse and action since the conclusion of the Yokohama Strategy and Plan of Action in 1994. Over the years, disasters have become increasingly multi-faceted, colliding, and complex.

The weaknesses of current de facto linear approaches to policy development and action and the increasingly complexity of disaster events were made all too clear during the recent COVID-19 pandemic with colliding crises arising from natural hazards, conflicts and climate change including from cyclones, floods, earthquakes, and subsequent displacements arising in many countries in Asia Pacific including the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and Tonga.

SDG-related gains have also been eroded and the world faces rising inequality, economic, social and developmental challenges arising not only as a result of the pandemic but also broader disconnection between humanity and the planet.

Added to this is the increasing urgency required to mitigate the impact of the climate crisis leveraging the clear linkages between planetary health and climate change, risks and vulnerabilities and rising likelihood of zoonotic outbreaks and future pandemics.

The event will posit that there is an immediate need to examine and address the planetary heath crisis we collectively face in a more holistic manner, highlighting the need for inter-sectoral action on political, economic, scientific, and social fronts. The relationship with disaster risk management will be highlighted throughout. 

Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members
  • Sunway Centre for Planetary Health,
  • The ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute and the Pacific Disaster Center

When conflict, climate change and COVID19 collide: building resilience in complex emergencies.

The IFRC, ICRC and the World Bank are sharpening our collective understanding of how fragile contexts which face multiple threats can strengthen risk reduction and contribute to building resilience at the community level. Partnerships across the humanitarian and development fields are critical to bridge the gaps in emergency response and link to longer term investments in recovery and development - a concept well agreed on but a practice that remains woefully unfulfilled. This session will interrogate gains being made and propose practical ways forward to accelerate progress. The session builds on the Africa Regional Platform theme ‘Towards Disaster Risk-Informed Development for a Resilient Africa in a COVID19 Transformed World’ and aligns with GPDRR’s themes on strengthening disaster risk governance, investing in local action to empower communities most exposed to risks and accelerating integrated disaster risk management as a pathway to achieving sustainable development.  

Session objectives

The drivers of crises are becoming more complex, and impacts are lasting longer. Emergencies are being driven by an intricate mix of climate and environmental change, disaster risk, pandemics, conflict, fragility and displacement. The Side Event will: 

  1. interrogate existing challenges in order to draw attention to concrete illustrations of what complex crisis mean in practice from a range of diverse perspectives on risk.  
  2. showcase promising opportunities across the humanitarian-development continuum that strengthen institutional and community recovery and preparedness.  
  3. establish connections and make propositions to accelerate progress which specifically target action across the disaster and crisis response, recovery and developmental spheres. 

Join Zoom Meeting

  • Meeting ID: 826 0840 9951
  • Passcode: 410270
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Ayaz Parvez (GFDRR/WB) aparvez@worldbank.org Thandie Mwape (IFRC) - Thandie.MWAPE@ifrc.org Liesa Sauerhammer (DRK) -L.Sauerhammer@drk.de
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Mengwi 6, 7, 8
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator 

  1. Ms. Thandie Mwape Villadsen - Regional Head, a.i., Humanitarian Diplomacy and Liaison Support, IFRC 

Speakers

  • Mr. Daniel O’Malley - Head of Regional Delegation for Kenya, Djibouti and Tanzania, ICRC 
  • Ms. Andoniaina Ratsimamanga - Secretary General Malagasy Red Cross
  • Mr. Martin Schuldes  -German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
  • Mr. Nouhoum Maiga  -Secretary General, Mali Red Cross 
  • Mr. Ayaz Parvez -Lead DRM Specialist GFDRR/World Bank
  • Mr. Banak Waal -Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management of South Sudan 
  • Ms. Katie Peters-Senior Research Fellow, ODI (tbc)
Learn more

Participants will be immersed in a discussion on risk-informed humanitarian and development interventions, with insight into the complementarities and contradictions that arise from different perspectives on risk. 

Where do we stand 

Africa faces multiple complex threats including but not limited to climate change impacts, the COVID19 pandemic, and conflict. The year 2021, for example, saw 11 countries simultaneously responding to floods, displacements and food security while addressing COVID19. At least another five countries were embroiled in active armed conflict. And in addition, all these contexts continue to deal with climate-change induced droughts/food insecurity, and economic, health and social repercussions from the COVID19 pandemic. Yet our responses to risk are not always aligned, and well intentioned action to address different threats are not always cognizant of the positive or negative impact on risk management of other coexisting threats. Furthermore action on risk varies across scales. Recognizing that communities are themselves the first responders to crises requires international and national partners to rally behind their knowledge and power of mobilization. But does this happen sufficiently? And what are the opportunities to build resilience when conflict, COVID19 and climate change collide, surpassing local to sub-national risk management capacities?   

The interaction of compounding risks in complex emergencies demands for a flexible and efficient HD(P) nexus approach. In reality, there is no linear progress from humanitarian response to development but rather rapid shifts between humanitarian interventions and windows of development. Through partnerships across the nexus recovery efforts and development gains can ideally be safeguarded during humanitarian crisis and response and increasing long-term resilience. 

Session guiding questions

  • How do complementarities and contradictions from different perspectives on risk manifest in practice?  
  • What changes to operational approaches are enacted, or are required, to genuinely deal with coexisting risks – taking the example of disasters, climate, conflict and COVID19? 
  • What needs to be done at strategic and policy levels to accelerate a more comprehensive approach to pursuing resilience outcomes in contexts of complex risk contexts?  
Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members
  • International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) 
  • Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR) World Bank  
  • German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)

Integrating biological hazards in national disaster management policy: a call for whole of society action

The global experience of the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated that whole-of-society action supported by effective leadership and governance is required to manage the systemic risks associated with biological hazards.  The pandemic has challenged risk governance in countries and catalyzed changes and innovations in policies, legislation, coordination mechanisms, financing and effective risk management that have significant implications for future disaster risk reduction policy and practice. Collaborative partnerships, good practices, lessons learned and evidence generated during COVID-19 will need to be institutionalized in order to strengthen systems and capacities to manage  risks of disease outbreaks and other types of emergencies. 

Panellist will discuss how the experience and insights gained from the pandemic can help leaders, managers, policy makers, planners and practitioners on applying all-hazards, whole-of-society and risk management approaches to national and local disaster risk management strategies. Emphasis will be placed on country efforts to address the needs of the most vulnerable populations and ensure that no one is left behind. 

Session Objectives 

  • Promote effective risk governance, partnerships and collaboration on disaster risk management within and across sectors at all levels of society 
  • Share experience and good practices on the integration of biological and other priority hazards in national and local strategies and plans for disaster risk reduction 
  • Discuss how the governance, innovations and lessons from COVID-19 can contribute to all-hazard, whole of society risk management policies, plans and practice at global, national, local and community levels 
  • Contribute to the knowledge base on managing complex and interconnected risks 
  • Discuss intersectoral approaches in reducing risk and building resilience  
  • Identify best practices to accelerate the implementation of the Sendai Framework through policy making, research and innovation 

Registration

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Contact
Dr. Qudsia Huda, hudaq@who.int Dr Kai Von Harbou, vonharbouk@who.int Mrs Elleanie Tewolde, tewoldee@who.int
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Interpretation (Language)
Room/Location
Mengwi 6, 7, 8
BNDCC 2-Ground Floor
Conference event type
Speakers

Moderator

  1. Prof. Virginia Murray, Head of Global Disaster Risk Reduction, UK Health Security Agency 

Speakers 

  • Mr. Robert Kwame Agyarko, Lead Advisor, Outbreaks and Epidemics, African Risk Capacity 
  • Dr. Elizabeth Newnham, Senior Lecturer and Program Lead, Global Resilience, Curtin University, Perth, Australia and Research Fellow, Harvard University, USA 
  • Dr. Claudia Herrera, Executive Secretary, CEPREDENAC.
Learn more

Policy and governance case studies will be discussed to show how good practices, innovations and evidence generated during COVID-19 can be systematically leveraged to strengthen risk governance, policies and actions for the management of health emergencies and disasters. 

Where do we stand 

The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030 places health at the centre of disaster risk management and emphasizes the need for multi-hazard risk management approaches that address biological hazards such as pandemics and epidemics alongside natural, environmental and technological hazards. The Sendai Framework calls for better integration of health into disaster risk management particularly referring to the International Health Regulations and recognizes the vital interface between disaster risk management and achievement of health for all. A risk-informed, whole of society approach to the management of risks is core to the Sendai Framework and to WHO’s Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management Framework. However, as the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed, many countries’ policies for health emergencies and disasters are not fully aligned across sectors which frequently has implications for whole-of-society and intersectoral approaches to risk management. Integrating risks associated with biological hazards, including pandemics, into disaster risk reduction planning at the national and local levels has been identified as a priority action to strengthen resilience at the national level.

Session guiding questions

  1. What roles have whole-of-society governance played in managing the COVID-19 pandemic? 
  2. What are the recommended actions for whole-of-society policies to manage systemic disaster risks including those from biological hazards? 
  3. How have lessons and scientific evidence been generated from diverse COVID-19 experiences, e.g. different country contexts, across sub-populations in countries? 
  4. How have strategies to ensure “no one is left behind” been employed in the COVID-19 including compound effects of concurrent emergencies, displacement and conflict for vulnerable populations? 
Event bucket
Informal Programme
Organizing Team members

Jointly organized by World Health Organization, UK Health Security Agency, African Risk Capacity 

Earth Observations (EO) Risk Toolkit

This Ignite Stage session presents a new online resource called Earth Observations (EO) Risk Toolkit, as an integral part of the National Risk Information Portal (RiX) under the UNDRR’s flagship initiative called the Global Risk Assessment Framework (GRAF). EO Risk Toolkit is a new hub site, launched during the GP2022, and it is designed to provide DRR users with access to open-sourced tools and services that leverage Earth Observations. GRAF was premised on the Global Assessment Report 2019 to improve risk analytics around interconnected and systemic risk, including the multiplier effect climate change has on vulnerability and the risk landscape. By engaging with government partners, the UN development and humanitarian system and other global and national partners, GRAF supports countries to strengthen their risk data ecosystems.

To help achieve GRAF’s aim, RiX is being established to aggregate open-source risk datasets and information to help drive harmonization and standardization aligned to the Hazard Definition and Classification Review.  As an integral part of RiX, EO Risk Toolkit provides DRR users direct links to a collection of open and free disaster risk analytical tools and services to be used at country level, accompanied by supporting documents. More specifically, EO Risk toolkit comes with use cases and technical guidance of the tools and services as well as thematically oriented policy briefs to help policy makers and practitioners understand how to better leverage the EO data and products in policy-making and DRR operations. 

The target audience for this presentation are potential users of the EO Risk Toolkits, such as emergency responding agencies of national and local governments and development agencies so that they can find the tools and services suitable for their operations. The presentation highlights the importance of Earth Observations as the critical science-basis for DRR policy-making and operations. It introduces a brand new EO Risk Toolkit that helps policy makers and practitioners in policy-making and DRR operations. This session emphasises that the Toolkit provides direct links to EO-leveraged open tools and services to monitor and analyse disaster risks, such as those related to floods, crops and wildfires. 

Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
Off
Format
Display on agenda
No
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Room/Location
Taman Jepun
BNDCC 1-Ground Floor
Parent - Conference
Conference event type
Speakers

Speaker: Kene Onukwube

DEAR Africa, Group on Earth Observations (GEO), Esri, UNDRR and NASA

Event bucket
Informal Programme

Disaster Governance - Engagement of Stakeholder in National Disaster Risk Reduction

A key element of good governance is effective preparation. The protection of lives and livelihoods is a vital responsibility and central to a prevention agenda. This requires building consensus among all members of society to know and understand their particular roles and responsibilities. An inclusive, participatory process is required, and there are demonstrated success stories from which we can learn.

In this session we aim to look at a few examples and understand the forces which lead to the success of effective and inclusive processes, the factors which limit the impact, and what can be shared as others also seek to benefit from increasingly diverse participation.

Session objectives 

  • Share experiences, good practices and lessons learned of inclusive governance in the implementation of the Sendai Framework.
  • Identify elements of successful governance and inclusion that we wish to see replicated.
  • Understand how previous barriers to good governance and inclusion were overcome and document those strategies.
Conference content type
Conference session
Onsite Accessibility
On
Contact
Jekulin LIpi, jekulin.lipi@unmgcy.org
Accessibility
Display on agenda
Yes
Time zone
Asia/Makassar
Participation
Primary floor language
Room/Location
Medan Room
BICC First Floor
Speakers

Moderator 

  • Nina Birkeland, Senior Adviser on Disaster Displacement and Climate Change, Norwegian Refugee Council

Speakers

  • Undersecretary (Vice Minister) Ricardo B. Jalad, Executive Director and Administrator of the Office of Civil Defense of Philippines
  • Willy Missack, Climate Activist from Tanna, Vanuatu
  • Nicholas Bishop, Disaster Risk Reduction Programme Officer, International Organization for Migration (IOM)
  • Chris Dekki, Director, Global Advocacy and Engagement at SLOCAT Partnership on Sustainable, Low Carbon Transport
  • Amal Ridene, Young Climate Change Negotiator & Investor Engagement Officer at AfricInvest
Learn more

This session will be an interactive space for not only the panelists, but also participants to share their experiences - good and bad.

One major area that represents a perennial struggle for the United Nations is that of localization: ensuring that international policies find life and meaning at local levels. This event is meant to serve as a contribution to that wider discourse, highlighting the successes and failures from the panelists as well as the participants, in addition to the lessons learned from participants.

Where do we stand

The Sendai Framework offers a host of strategies and methodologies for bringing its content to the local level. Moreover, while the UN has a number of different agencies and institutions addressing distinct issues (climate, development, disaster, gender, etc.), we know that at the local level all of these issues merge into a holistic approach. Aspirationally, the experiences of the local level would inform the international, and vice versa - yet the degree to which this happens is largely dependent on highly varying local circumstances. With this as the broad context, we aim to learn how relationships between local actors and governments are successfully realizing the goals of Sendai. We will bring attention to the crucial links between local and national DRR management plans as highlighted by the speakers

Session guiding questions

  1. What is the relationship like between your local government and local actors engaged in disaster risk reduction?
  2. What strategies and events shaped these relationships?
  3. What are the strengths and weaknesses you see?
  4. What lessons would you wish to offer to, or learn from others on this panel?
Event bucket
Preparatory Days