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4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: morning coffee Scoping study launch Isabelle de Muyser-Boucher OCHA Yasemin Aysan independent consultant.

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Presentation on theme: "4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: morning coffee Scoping study launch Isabelle de Muyser-Boucher OCHA Yasemin Aysan independent consultant."— Presentation transcript:

1 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: morning coffee Scoping study launch Isabelle de Muyser-Boucher OCHA Yasemin Aysan independent consultant to OCHA Antonella Vitale consultant to OCHA

2 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Scoping study launch this session is structured as follows: a.introduction and launch and of scoping study Isabelle de Muyser-Boucher, OCHA b.content and conclusions of the scoping study Yasemin Aysan, independent OCHA consultant c.feedback and Shelter after Disaster Antonella Vitale, consultants to OCHA

3 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: content of the scoping study a. introduction and launch of scoping study Isabelle de Muyser-Boucher OCHA 09:00 – 9:30 09:30 – 09:45 09:45 – 10:15 10:15 – 11:15 11:15 – 11:30 11:30 – 12:15 12:15 – 13:00 13:00 – 14:00 14:00 – 14:45 14:45 – 15:30 15:30 – 15:45 15:45 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:15 17:15 – 17:45 17:45 – 18:30 18:30

4 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Launch of Scoping study Exploring key changes and developments in post-disaster settlement, shelter and housing, 1982 - 2006 Shelter Meeting, 04.05.2006

5 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Why a scoping study? 1975: a major review of emergency shelter provision is launched by UNDRO 1982: "Shelter after Disaster – Guidelines for Assistance" goes to print 2003: Shelterproject.org discussions → Bibliographic reference (out of print) → Case studies are outdated + update is required 2005:Revision process starts → Phase I (Nov. 2005 – March 2006): Desk study of major changes and developments

6 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC What is the Scoping Study about? Compares present context to that prevailing 24 years ago: –Aim: to inform the forthcoming revision of "Shelter after Disaster – Guidelines for Assistance" –Objective: an understanding of major changes occurred –Scope: from pre to post-disaster all aspects of livelihoods all countries concerned a continuous process

7 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Structure: Introduction The risk environment Institutions and operations New knowledge Principles Conclusions Internet resources + Bibliography

8 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Acknowledgements Our team of consultants: Yasemin Aysan, Ian Davis, Tom Corsellis and Antonella Vitale All those who volunteered information and comments DFID for having accepted to support the revision Methodology: This Report is mostly based upon: a Desk study carried out between Nov.2005 and Feb. 2006 by a group of four consultants to OCHA responses to a semi-structured questionnaires received from 15 experts from various origins and horizons

9 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC The way forward (phase II of the revision): By November 2006: –Identification of framework of assessment for case studies –Start of case studies –Draft principles & strategy –Presentation of intermediate results to ShelterMeeting By May 2007: –Case studies completed – Implementation section drafted –Review of results by ShelterMeeting By November 2007: –Final draft submitted to ShelterMeeting By May 2008: –Printing of revised Guidelines by OCHA

10 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Thank you and Good reading!

11 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: conclusions of the scoping study and feedback b. content of the scoping study Yasemin Aysan independent consultant to OCHA

12 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 1.Hazard patterns have changed There has been an increase in climatic variability; climatic hazards, such as floods, sea level rise and droughts are increasing the vulnerability of populations; There have been a series of disasters with high-profile regional and cross-border impacts: (Hurricane Mitch,1998, Mozambique/ Southern Africa floods, 2000-1, Indian Ocean Tsunami, 2004) b. Scoping study content Risk environment

13 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 2. Exposure to hazards is growing Due to macro-level vulnerabilities such as: population growth urbanisation concentration of population and assets eg. In coastal areas, flood plains, mega cities uneven economic development and poverty b. Scoping study content Risk environment

14 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 2. Exposure to hazards is growing Due to local-level vulnerabilities such as: lack of safe land resulting in unsafe housing on dangerous sites limited dissemination/understanding of risks few options available to the poor to protect themselves b. Scoping study content Risk environment

15 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 3. More emphasis on Disaster Risk Management but limited implementation Improved Risk Assessment methodologies International frameworks for Risk Reduction Institutional and legal Systems for DRM International Cooperation and Partnerships on Early Warning Systems (EWS) Risk Reduction through byelaws and land-use planning controls and their enforcement Risk Reduction through knowledge of safer construction available since the 80s. b. Scoping study content Risk environment

16 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 4. There has not been a coherent post disaster shelter and housing policy, or until now a regular sector review Influenced by general housing policies: Late 80s-early 90s enabling framework approach -participation, decentralisation, housing finance and capacity building (IYSH, 1987; Global Shelter Strategy for 2000, 1888; Habitat II, 1996) Since mid-90s sustainable development app.- housing as an economic and social asset, emphasis on environment (Rio Conference, 1992; Millenium Development Goals, 2000) b. Scoping study content Policy environment

17 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Influenced by human rights and housing rights agenda: Right to adequate housing –security of tenure, elimination of discrimination in housing sector, eradication of forced eviction (Habitat II, 1996; Human Settlements and Human Rights Commissions, 2001) leading to rights-based approach in post disaster housing. b. Scoping study content Policy environment

18 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 5. Policy shifts in post-disaster housing and settlement have occured, influenced by the DRM, sustainable development, human rights and housing policies. Local capacity and vulnerability are better understood; urban disasters pose a greater challenge –needs and coping, renters and marginalised, land value and availability Reconstruction is identified as an opportunity for future risk reduction yet not systematically used b. Scoping study content Policy shifts in post disaster housing

19 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC There is a much broader and more holistic view of what contitutes the sector –economic and social benefits and livelihood linkages Linkages between safety and availability of land, land tenure and success in reconstruction and recovery are recognised Settlement approach -social, physical and economic infrastructure and not just family shelter is widely accepted b. Scoping study content Policy shifts in post- disaster housing

20 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Emphasis on beneficiaries having more responsibility in decisions and process but implementation remains weak The need to shift from product delivery to enabling organisations is recognised Housing as a process and the relationship between relief, recovery, reconstruction (and development) is recognised but rarely integrated into programming and coordinated Decentralisation to local level is desirable but not always possible b. Scoping study content Policy shifts in post- disaster housing

21 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 6. In contrast to other sectors, shelter and housing remain weak in assessment, planning and coordination, both internally and in linking with other sectors Few international tools and mechanism are: for coordination UN emergency appeals and CAPs Humanitarian Response Review, 2005 IASC and the Cluster Working Groups on Shelter, Camp Management, Early Recovery b. Scoping study content Strategic planning and coordination

22 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC For assessment, monitoring and evaluation SPHERE standards, 1997 ALNAP (Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action), 1997 DEC (Disaster Emergency Committee), 1998 SAME (Shelter Assessment, Monitoring and Evaluation for transitional shelter),2005 PROVENTION Consortium and the World Bank (learning papers on reconstruction and recovery), 2000 (long-term impact ass. and longitudinal studies still limited) b. Scoping study content Assessment, monitoring and evaluation

23 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC For international exchange of knowledge: Settlements and Disasters Delft, The Netherlands 1988 Reconstruction after Urban Earthquakes: An International Agenda to Achieve Safer Settlements in 1990’s Buffalo, USA 1989 Disasters and the Small Dwelling Oxford, UK 1991 First International Workshop on Improved Shelter Response and Environment for Refugees Geneva, Switzerland, 1993 World Conferences on Disaster Reduction Yokohama, Japan 1994 and Kobe, Japan 2005 First Emergency Settlement Conference Madison, USA 1996 United Nations Conference on Human Settlements - Habitat II Istanbul, Turkey 1996 International Conferences – Post-disaster reconstruction (I-Rec) Coventry, UK 2002 & 2004 Peer reviews various locations between 2002 – 2004 Shelter Meeting held biannually in Geneva, Switzerland 2004 – ongoing b. Scoping study content Exchange of knowledge

24 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 7. Good governance and enabling shelter strategies of the 90s called for participation of communities, civil society, local authorities, private sector leading to the proliferation of actors The 1982 Guidelines tended to emphasize community and individual self-reliance and did not sufficiently address role of other actors Number and range of actors involved in post disaster shelter and housing has proliferated in the last two decades Strong national (Iran, Turkey) and local Governments (India) continue to play a key role in policy and delivery b. Scoping study content Roles and capacities

25 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC Capacities largely remained unsupported in weak administrations (Mitch countries) resulting in more prominent role for local NGOs and the international community In the 90s NGO attention shifted to refugees and conflict. Recent large scale disasters ( Mitch, Gujarat, Turkey, Tsunami, Pakistan) changed the trend Increased overlap of conflict and natural disasters resulted in mixed mandate responses (flow of funds determined) b. Scoping study content Roles and capacities

26 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC UN agencies have been responding to shelter and housing based on flow of funds, and not always on mandates, capacities or proven expertise IFIs are increasingly becoming the key actors in reconstruction where housing is a major part Private sector, small builders play a sinificant role Quantitative and qualitative gaps in human resources and expertise remain. b. Scoping study content Roles and capacities

27 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC 8. Choices for post- disaster shelter and housing have been recognised and more diverse approaches have been supported since the 1982 Guidelines Prefabricated solution dominated 80s discussion; however pressures remain Host families Cash for owner built Cash and vouchers for materials Insurance for risk transfer b. Scoping study content

28 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC It should be recognised that shelter and housing ( as well as recovery) is not a linear process and that the various choices have to be supported in parallel. A practical coordination mechanism to develop and implement a single sector strategy for coherence is required. b. Scoping study content please fell free to use the side bar

29 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC followed by: morning coffee c. feedback and Shelter after Disaster Antonella Vitale consultant to OCHA

30 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC how should these conclusions inform the revision of ‘Shelter after Disaster: Guidelines for Assistance’? 1. hazard patterns have changed 2. exposure to hazards is growing 3. there is more emphasis on Disaster Risk Management, but limited implementation 4. there has not been a coherent post-disaster shelter and housing policy or, until now, a regular sector review 5. post disaster housing and settlement approaches influenced by DRM, sustainable development, rights and housing policies 6. compared to other sectors, shelter and housing remain weak in assessment, planning and coordination, both internally and in linking with the other sectors 7.good governance and enabling shelter strategies of the ’90s called for the participation of communities, civil society, local authorities, private sector, and the proliferation of actors 8.choices for post disaster shelter and housing have been recognised and more diverse approaches have been supported than recognised by the 1982 guidelines c. feedback conclusions the scoping study was intended to inform the guidelines revision: what have we learnt?

31 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC c. feedback conclusions online blog new for 2006! quick and easy access from sheltercentre.org immediate posting the scoping study should inform the guidelines revision feedback through: 1. working group blog, password protected 2. public access blog, no password

32 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC the study will inform the revision by Shelter Centre with OCHA of ‘Shelter after Disaster: Guidelines for Assistance’ over Summer 2006, Shelter Centre will identify partners to undertake case studies for the revision, referring to specific: 1.major responses, including different phases of response and approaches to response 2.types of hazard and disaster 3.regions and country income levels 4.topics of focus, such as land rights preliminary results of case studies will be presented at SM06b, with a collated draft report presented at SM07a c. Shelter after Disaster phase 2 please propose partner organisations and case studies the scoping study should inform the guidelines revision

33 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC feedback sheets name and contact details express your level of interest comments or suggestions? please leave the sheets for us to collect! in your folders also feedback at: c. Shelter after Disaster phase 2

34 4 - 5 May 2006 | Geneva | hosted by IFRC the study will inform the revision with OCHA of ‘Shelter after Disaster: Guidelines for Assistance’ over Summer 2006, Shelter Centre will identify partners to undertake case studies for the revision, referring to specific: 1.major responses, including different phases of response and approaches to response 2.types of hazard and disaster 3.regions and country income levels 4.topics of focus, such as land rights preliminary results of case studies will be presented at SM06b, with a collated draft report presented at SM07a c. Shelter after Disaster phase 2 please propose partner organisations and case studies the scoping study should inform the guidelines revision


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