Reducing Risk: Sustainability in the Third World Session 40.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
 Challenge technofix, scientific economic response  Real issues are about principles and ethics of development and trade  Need a framework of gender.
Advertisements

The Environment and Development
World Hunger CGW-4U.
Africa’s Environmental Issues
Economic Growth in Developing Nations. Characteristics of Developing Nations.
18-1 Levels of Development
Chapter 19 Food Resources
Exercise 1 Famine: Who is the Culprit? Study the news articles (p.1 and p. 2) about famine in Africa. Try to list the causes of famine. Drought, wars,
Food Insecurity and Land Grabbing as a result of REDD+ and Bioenergy Simone Lovera, Global Forest Coalition and Sobrevivencia/Friends of the Earth-Paraguay.
© CommNet 2013 Education Phase 3 Sustainable food production.
Sustainable Agriculture
1 © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Chapter 17 Growth and the Less- Developed Countries Microeconomics for Today Irvin B. Tucker.
Reducing Risk: Sustainability and Sustainable Development
Rural Poverty and Hunger (MDG1) Kevin Cleaver Director of Agriculture and Rural Development November 2004.
Managing Natural Resources in Africa Geography 12.
1 An Investment Framework For Clean Energy and Development November 15, 2006 Katherine Sierra Vice President Sustainable Development The World Bank.
Chapter 15 Hunger and the Global Environment
24Tomorrow’s World. Overview of Chapter 24  Living Sustainably  Sustainable Living: A Plan of Action  Changing Personal Attitude and Practices  What.
AP Environmental Science
Development and Health An Introduction to Development.
Sustainability: Global Population – History, Changes, Areas of Crisis, Causes, and the Future
Environmental contribution to development Sophia Vassileiadou, Environmentalist, Msc WORKSHOP 11/09/2012 Shelter of Greek Mountaineering Club of Nigrita.
Chapter 15 Economic Growth and Development. Economic Growth  Real Per Capita GDP = Real GDP/Population  Shifts in The PPC, shift the Real Potential.
Feeding the World Chapter 14 Feeding the World Chapter 14.
UNDP-BUREAU FOR CRISIS PREVENTION AND RECOVERY (BCPR) Disaster Reduction Unit Disaster Reduction – A Challenge to Sustainable Development in Africa.
Environmental Issues in Africa
Division Of Early Warning And Assessment MODULE 10: TARGETING A THEME IN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT: HUMAN VULNERABILITY DUE TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE.
Chapter 13 – Agricultural Production and the Environment.
What is Poverty? Poverty is deprivation of those things that determine the quality of life, including food, clothing, shelter and safe drinking water,
Economics Chapter 18 Economic Development
Mainstreaming Environment and Poverty Reduction into National Development Process in Kosovo UNDP – UNEP POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT INITIATIVE Inception Workshop.
Pollution & Unequal Distribution of Water, Deforestation, & Desertification.
Soil is the earth’s fragile skin that anchors all life on Earth. It is comprised of countless species that create a dynamic and complex ecosystem and is.
Chapter 19 Economic Growth in Developing Nations.
Chapter 9 The Production and Distribution of Food.
Environmental Issues In Africa
No First 5 Agenda: Take out your packets on the MNC- you were to highlight the pros and cons- today you will be making a chart of the pros and cons Tomorrow.
Prof. Carmen G. Gonzalez Seattle University School of Law 1.
Hungry for Food Security. What is Food Security? …food security entails access, by all people, at all times, to the safe and nutritious food that they.
24 Tomorrow’s World. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Overview of Chapter 24  Living Sustainably  Sustainable Living: A Plan of Action.
Resource Use and Sustainability Dr. George Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech Copyright 2006.
Desertification …Against the wind Sandstorm in Mauritania.
Ch 14: Agricultural Methods and Pest Management. Outline 14.1 The Development of Agriculture 14.2 Fertilizer and Agriculture 14.3 Agricultural Chemical.
Food – a resource. Why is food important? 1)Source of energy 2)Source of materials for building new cells & structures **malnourishment can lead to other.
18 Food Resources. Overview of Chapter 18  World Food Security  Food Production  Challenges of Producing More Crops and Livestock  Environmental Impact.
General introduction Florence Agyei-Martey. National Land Use  There is weak linkage at all levels between land use planning and socio- economic development.
Chapter 25 Tomorrow’s World. Overview of Chapter 25 o Living Sustainably o Sustainable Living: A Plan of Action o Changing Personal Attitude and Practices.
Unit 7: South Asia. Managing Resources India has made huge strides in reducing poverty and has improved health and education. Development policies have.
Chapter 10 Latin America Today.
STANDARDS: SS7G2 The student will discuss environmental issues across the continent of Africa. Explain how water pollution and the unequal distribution.
Problems of Desertification and Degradation
Africa’s Environmental Issues
19 Food Resources.
Lesson seven: Youthful Populations
Standard Addressed: 11.6 Students analyze the different explanations for the Great Depression and how the New Deal fundamentally changed the role of the.
Environmental Issues in Africa
Africa’s Environmental Issues
24 Tomorrow’s World.
24 Tomorrow’s World.
18 Food Resources.
PREPARED BY SAY PUNNAREAY, MBA
The process of Desertification
Lesson seven: Youthful Populations
Sustainability: Global Population – History, Changes, Areas of Crisis, Causes, and.
Africa’s Environmental Issues
Africa’s Environmental Issues
Africa’s Environmental Issues
18 Food Resources.
Presentation transcript:

Reducing Risk: Sustainability in the Third World Session 40

2 Session Objectives  Understand the impacts of disasters on developing countries and how these impacts also affect the U.S.  Understand the relationships between poverty and sustainability  Understand effects of international development and debt management programs on disaster vulnerability  Understand critiques of international development programs  Be able to place Third World risk reduction strategies in the context of an understanding of international development efforts

Session 403 Impact of Disasters on Developing Countries  Most deaths from disasters triggered by extreme events take place in the Third World  Most human lives lost in disasters are those of people living in Third World countries of Asia, Latin America, and Africa  The cost of these disasters is less in absolute dollar terms than in industrialized countries, but are large in relation to the size of their respective economies and set back development efforts

Session 404 Why Should the U.S. be Concerned with Reducing Risk in the Third World?  Moral reasons –Concern with saving lives –Others are more likely to assist the U.S. if it assists others  Political reasons –Some of the countries are allies, or are important to allies –Sometimes there are international treaty obligations –U.S. is concerned with regional security –Large number of U.S. citizens with families live in many of the countries –Citizen groups concerned with foreign interests in the U.S. constitute voting blocks  Economic reasons –U.S. corporations may have facilities in the affected countries –U.S. may import an important or strategic commodity from the affected country –U.S. banks may have outstanding loans to business or governments entities in the affected countries –U.S. engineering and other companies may find lucrative contracts in the process of recovery  Scientific reasons –Helps scientists understand how to protect the U.S. from these kinds of extreme events –The study of disasters helps protect the U.S. population

Session 405 Economic Effects of Disasters  Lower, and more erratic, yields of crops  Lower weight gain by livestock  Distress sales during bad years mean lower prices  Economic distress means indebtedness at high interest rates and potentially loss of land  Little money for education of children  Poor diet and health care  Under nutrition and poor health reduce working capacity  More labor time (usually female) spent seeking water and fuel  Fewer environmental amenities and goods with which to provide supplementary, non-farm income

Session 406 Health and Welfare Effects of Disasters  Disease transmission –Degraded or marginal environment may harbor insect vectors of disease –Isolated forest margin residence can expose humans to virulent retroviruses –Lack of water can expose people to disease –Exposure to unprotected sources of surface water can expose humans to disease –Dust storms and low humidity is associated with spread of meningitis  Disease increases poverty, by: –Reducing the ability work –Increasing the amount of money used for health care and funeral expenses –Diverting labor time to care for the ill and disabled –Encouraging frequent pregnancies to make up for high infant and child mortality, diverting women’s labor time from production and depleting their energy

Session 407 Poverty Decreases Sustainability Through Technology  Overuse of land reduces natural fertility  Overuse of limited pasture allows erosion  Limited land and pasture make it difficult to set aside land as fallow  Clearing of steeper slopes for farming or grazing allows water erosion  Reliance on limited wood fuel resources accelerates deforestation  Production of charcoal for urban markets accelerates deforestation  Inability to use production technologies that abate pollution  Inability to afford disposal of solid wastes from production

Session 408 Poverty Decreases Sustainability Through Economics  Inability to afford more concentrated energy forms results in the poor using less dense, less efficient forms  Reliant on short-term crops for ready cash, farmers cannot afford to plant tree crops that would anchor the soil  Poor farmers lack investment of money or labor in soil conservation works  Poor herders cannot afford fencing to allow rotational grazing or improved seed for pasture improvement

Session 409 Placing Third World Risk Reduction Strategies in Context of International Development Efforts  Internal contradiction with large development agencies: some encouraging risk reduction, others encouraging investments which increase risk  Little connection between disaster risk reduction and “business as usual” development activities –“Normalizing” disasters make it hard to build into development activities that kinds of projects that reduce risk –“Complex humanitarian crises” drain away aid money from BOTH ‘normal’ development AND disaster prevention