Law’s contribution to emergency and disaster management Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and The Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Workshop on National Platforms 23 – 29 August 2008, Davos Switzerland Federal Department of Foreign Affairs FDFA Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation.
Advertisements

SESSION 17: DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND EDUCATION.
Disability Inclusive Disaster Risk Reduction Recommendations for Integrating the Preparedness, Response, Recovery and Mitigation Needs of the Whole Community.
Claudia de Windt Senior Legal Specialist Department of Sustainable Development Strengthening Humanitarian Assistance and Prevention and Response Coordination.
National Presentation Republic of Serbia SEMINAR: Insurance as a method for Disaster Risk Reduction in SEE April 2013 Berovo, Macedonia.
1Comprehensive Disaster Risk Management Framework National Disaster Management Systems 111 Institutional Arrangements and Organizational Structures Session.
A hazard in itself is not a disaster.. It has the potential to become one when it happens to populations who have certain vulnerabilities and insufficient.
Dr Michael Eburn Barrister and Senior Fellow, ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society Australian National University Understanding.
Perth airport – Emergency law Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law The Australian National University CANBERRA ACT 0200 P: E:
INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE. 2 Implemented in 12 countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, through IUCN regional.
Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society Mainstreaming law and policy.
1Comprehensive Disaster Risk Management Framework The Role of Local Actors 111 Safer Cities Session 1 World Bank Institute Fouad Bendimerad, Ph.D., P.E.
TORT LIABILITY FOR FAILURE TO WARN OF NATURAL HAZARDS – A THREAT TO COMMUNITY RESILIANCE Michael Eburn Senior Lecturer, School of Law UNE, Armidale, NSW.
News from the courts – post disaster legal proceedings and implications for emergency managers Michael Eburn Senior Research Fellow ANU College of Law.
Learning lessons Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society.
Executive Master Class Darwin, 2014 Emerging Legal Considerations in Emergency Management Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law.
© BUSHFIRE AND NATURAL HAZARDS CRC 2015 TRENDS IN AUSTRALIAN WILDFIRE LITIGATION Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law, Australian National University, Canberra.
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT IN DISASTER RISK MANAGEMENT Arandjelovac, 5 th June 2015.
Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society Australian National University CANBERRA ACT 0200 P: (02) E:
Vital records mean essential agency records that are needed to meet operational responsibilities under national security emergencies or other emergency.
(Legal) Risk Assessment Michael Eburn Senior Lecturer, School of Law UNE, Armidale, NSW. 19 November 2008.
Who are tax intermediaries?  Tax advisers  Accountants  Lawyers  Financial institutions Why are they considered as tax intermediaries?  Tax Compliance:
Introduction to the Guidelines for the Domestic Facilitation and Regulation of International Disaster Relief and Initial Recovery Assistance (The “IDRL.
Technician Module 2 Unit 8 Slide 1 MODULE 2 UNIT 8 Prevention, Intelligence & Deterrence.
Key Elements of Legislation For Disaster Risk Reduction Second Meeting of Asian Advisory Group of Parliamentarians for DRR 5-7 February, 2014, Vientiane,
Contingency Planning and Emergency Preparedness Process and Practice PCWG Protection Cluster Coordination Training 2008.
INITIAL PLANNING CONFERENCE FOR ARF DiREx 2015
1 Hyogo Framework for Action 2005 – 2015 “Building the resilience of nations and communities to disasters” ASEAN REGIONAL FORUM The 8 th.
“National Civil Defence Cadet Corps” The alternative for Educational Institutions.
Foundational Doctrine Guiding Fire Suppression in the Forest Service Product of the Pulaski Conference June 2005.
PRESENTATION AT THE LAUNCH OF THE ITALIAN IDRL REPORT, BOLGONA, 15 JUNE The Australian Experience in the Cooperation on Disaster Management.
REGIONAL COOPERATION ON DISASTER MANAGEMENT IN THE ASIA PACIFIC Disasters and International Law in the Asia-Pacific Workshop.
Data Protection Privacy in the Digital Age: the UN General Assembly Resolution Sophie Kwasny, 16 October th International Conference, Mauritius.
Dr. Charles W. Beadling Central Asia Regional Health Security Conference April 2012 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.
Pakistan Urban Forum -South Asian Cities Conference Session on “Disaster and Mass Causality Response in Urban Crisis” Emergency Response through Community.
Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society. ‘What does success look like for emergency managers - or how do you know.
Developing ‘resilient communities’ that ‘share responsibility’ – issues for law. Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law The Australian National University.
Associate Professor Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law The Australian National University CANBERRA Legal implication of legislation, the Fire Service.
The UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities (UNCRPD)
Saving lives, changing minds. Disaster Laws Overview of the disaster law topics Male, Maldives, 11 October 2011 David Fisher, IFRC IDRL Programme.
Learning from adversity – 75 years of bushfire inquiries Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law The Australian National University CANBERRA ACT 0200 P: +
UNCLASSIFIED As of W Mar 08 Mr. Scott A. Weidie, J722 1 Multinational Planning Augmentation Team (MPAT) 04 March 2008 Governments and Crises: Roles.
Legal consequences from the 2003 Canberra fires Michael Eburn Senior Research Fellow ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society Darwin,
International Recovery Forum 2014 ~ The Role of Private Sector in Disaster Recovery ~ 21 January 2014 Kobe, Japan Dr Janet L. Asherson THE LINK BETWEEN.
WHY DRR Minimizing impacts of disasters in health sector Maximizing readiness to respond 1$ vs 7 $
Emergency Management for Local Government Legal Issues Michael Eburn ANU College of Law.
On Legal Precedents Sharing responsibility Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society The Australian National University.
„Adaptation to the changing climate: time to intensify efforts 23-24/11/ Brussels.
Tom Lenart & John Field CT DEMHS Region 2.  Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP)  Commission on Fire Prevention and Control.
Tools for Mainstreaming Disaster Risk Reduction: Guidance Notes for Development Organisations Charlotte Benson and John Twigg Presented by Margaret Arnold.
VICTORIAN CHARTER OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES.
Standing Joint Commander (United Kingdom) The Ministry of Defence’s Standing Joint Commander (United Kingdom) Presentation to Dealing with Disasters International.
This course was developed in cooperation with the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law THE ROLE OF THE PUBLIC.
Building community resilience Ralph Throp Resilience Division Scottish Government.
Policies, Institutions and Governance of Natural Hazards
Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law CANBERRA ACT 2601
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction
Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law 2 December 2015.
Disasters and Law Dr Michael Eburn
Lessons From Emergency Services
District Disaster Risk Reduction Managment Plan
International Disaster Law- an issue of Sovereign or Human Rights?
The role of Neighbourhood Houses in disaster management
Sharing responsibility and making communities resilient?
Dr Michael Eburn Name ANU College of Law
Associate Professor, Michael Eburn (ANU College of Law)
Oman Experience on Telecommunications Emergency Plan
Commitments and the way forward
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND DISASTER PLANNING IN AFRICA
Presentation transcript:

Law’s contribution to emergency and disaster management Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and The Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra.

In this talk I will... Reflect on our findings looking at law and it’s impact on Australian emergency and in particular, bushfire, management. Consider implications for the wider DRR community. 2

Our project is 1/3 of a combined suite Australian National University, Canberra: –Mainstreaming fire and emergency management law and policy. University of Canberra: –Land use planning for hazard mitigation. RMIT University, Melbourne: –Community engagement and understanding ‘shared responsibility’. 3

Our project set out to look at 1.Perceived inconsistencies; 2.The litigation experience; and 3.The role of government in fire management. 4

We have identified: There is ‘mainstreaming’ of emergency/disaster management into law, but it is of variable strength. Australian law does balance, or provide the means to balance competing interests in particular environment v hazard reduction. Litigation is an overrated concern. 5

Three critical issues 1.There is no clear measure of success. 2.Shortcomings when relying on the legal process to identify relevant lessons from previous events; and 3.How can law be used to facilitate policy goals of ‘shared responsibility’ and ‘resilient communities’? See McLennan, B. and Eburn, M., Exposing hidden value trade-offs; sharing wildfire management responsibility between government and citizens. International Journal of Wildland Fire, submitted for publication. 6

Output 34 publications and conference presentations. Continued interest within the fire and emergency services sector. Culminating in joint project outputs in

Why it was important People worry about the law: –Will I be sued? –Will I be prosecuted? –Does the law allow best practice or will the ‘greenies’ get in the way? How does law help, or hinder, the development of ‘resilient communities’ and ‘shared responsibility’? 8

The role of law Many lawyers express surprise that disaster (or emergency) management law exists as an area of study. BUT law is relevant at all stages of: –Prevent; –Prepare; –Respond; and –Recover. 9

Prevent Natural hazards are not disasters until they impact upon vulnerable populations. Law can reduce vulnerability eg –Land use planning and building regulation; –Secure systems of recording land tenure. 10

Preparation and response Ensure arrangements are in place to allow emergency response and to empower agencies to take necessary steps. Identify: –Who’s in charge? –Who is required or authorised to act? –Who is responsible for pre-planning? 11

Emergency powers May step on basic rights and freedoms so set out in advance: What they are? Exercised on whose authority: The ‘fire captain’s’ own initiative (eg Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 (UK) s 44) or a formal declaration (eg Civil Contingencies Act 2004 (UK) ss 20 and 21)? By who? For how long? What are the consequences for disobedience? 12

Recovery Social support? Financial support? Do we rebuild or rebuild better? ‘COMMUNITIES wiped out by Victoria's bushfires will be rebuilt "brick by brick", Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has vowed...’ The Age, 11 February k9.html#ixzz2EMJnFNUC 13

International aspects Disasters as a human rights issue –Right to life; –Right to adequate housing; etc International law can impose obligations on nation states to prepare for and respond to disasters. 14

International norms The Hyogo Framework for Action; The IFRC Disaster Law project and the ‘Guidelines for the domestic facilitation and regulation of international disaster relief and initial recovery assistance’; The Sphere project and other standards. The Responsibility to Protect (“R2P”). 15

But law is just a tool... It may take others to identify the problem that needs a legal solution. Law is popular with: –Governments and –Emergency service personnel. But, passing a law doesn’t ensure: –Compliance; –Enforcement; or –That the rules are appropriate. 16

It’s not so much the letter of the law... Respect for the ‘rule of law’; –Are the road markings there to direct traffic, or for decoration? Relationships between the judicial and other arms of government. The culture of the legal profession. The ‘meta-law’? 17

Governments v governance Top down v local. ‘… governance embodies a non- hierarchically organized structure encompassing state and non-state actors bringing about collectively binding policies without superior authority.’ Renn, O., Klinke, A., & van Asselt, M., Coping with complexity, uncertainty and ambiguity in risk governance: a synthesis. AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment, 40(2)

Law as a tool to adjust rights Litigation... –Helps resolve complex issues; –May force action – or reaction. See Handmer, J., Loh, E. and Choong, W., Using Law to Reduce Vulnerability to Natural Disasters. Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law & Policy, XIV(1) But it is also... –Slow, expensive, retrospective, reactive and traumatic. See Eburn, M., Litigation for failure to warn of natural hazards and community resilience. The Australian Journal of Emergency Management, 23(2)

Law as a tool for learning lessons The Australian model – 1.Hold a quasi judicial inquiry into the last disaster to see why we haven’t ‘learned the lessons’ from the one before that; 2.Sack the chief officer; and 3.Hope for better luck next time. Is litigation, or a quasi-judicial proceeding, appropriate or helpful? 20

Law can be used to advance private interests at the expense of the common good Consider: –Byron Shire v Vaughan [2009] NSWLEC 88. –Newcastle City Council v Pepperwood Ridge (2004) 132 LGERA

To return to the start, we identified: There is ‘mainstreaming’ of emergency/disaster management into Australian law, but it is of variable strength. Australian law does balance competing interests in particular environment v hazard reduction. Litigation is an overrated concern. 22

Three critical issues 1.There is no clear measure of success. 2.Shortcomings when relying on the legal process to identify relevant lessons from previous events; and 3.How can law be used to facilitate policy goals of ‘shared responsibility’ and ‘resilient communities’? See McLennan, B. and Eburn, M., Exposing hidden value trade-offs; sharing wildfire management responsibility between government and citizens. International Journal of Wildland Fire, submitted for publication. 23

The broader implications Law is a tool, rarely the problem, or the solution. The letter of the law can be changed where there is the will to do it. What’s harder to change is the ‘meta-law’. Laws needs to be ‘tailor made’ to fit the identified problem taking into account local processes, culture and authorities. 24

Questions? Comments? Thank you for your attention. Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law and Fenner School of Environment and Society The Australian National University CANBERRA ACT 0200 AUSTRALIA E: P: