[Radix] Periperi U: Partners enhancing resilience for people
exposed to risks - focus on universities
Ilan Kelman
ilan_kelman at hotmail.com
Thu Sep 11 04:44:44 PDT 2008
A positive news story for disaster risk reduction, education, and capacity is below. Congratulations to all those involved!
The website of DiMP (University of Cape Town's Disaster Mitigation for Sustainable Livelihoods Programme, coordinated by Dr Ailsa Holloway) is http://www.egs.uct.ac.za/dimp
>From their website:
Periperi stands for "partners enhancing resilience for people exposed to risks".
Periperi is derived from the 'pili pili' pepper grown in East Africa which is associated with hot, tasty food across much of southern and eastern Africa. The name 'pili pili' is adapted and interpreted in a range of forms, including 'mhiri biri', 'bile bile', 'piri piri', and 'peri peri'.
Congratulations and best wishes to all who are involved!
Ilan
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http://www.news.uct.ac.za/dailynews/?id=6829
USAID grant will underwrite disaster mitigation
9 September 2008
To meet increasing demands for skilled human resources to reduce and manage disaster risks in Africa, UCT and USAID have signed a US$2.9 million (R22.7million) agreement that will strengthen the capacity of 10 African universities in disaster-related scholarship and practice over the next three years.
This initiative, Periperi U (Partners enhancing resilience for people exposed to risks - focus on universities), will be implemented by UCT's Disaster Mitigation for Sustainable Livelihoods Programme (DiMP).
It is the first continental project of its kind to be funded by USAID's Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance. It will support institutional development related to disaster risk reduction capacity development, the roll-out of multi-disciplinary graduate programmes, and the provision of professional short courses across anglophonic, francophonic and lusophonic universities.
"The project is urgently needed to reduce Africa's disaster risk profile - one which is significantly shaped by current climate variability and which is expected to worsen under future climate change projections," said DiMP's Dr Ailsa Holloway.
Periperi U also recognises the impact of rapid urbanisation across the continent, often accompanied by new urban risk management challenges, as rapidly growing cities and towns outpace the capacity of poorly resourced local authorities to provide and maintain essential services. With its scholarship focused on hydrometeorological (severe weather and drought) and urban risks, Periperi U aims to train up to 600 students and practitioners in ten countries by 2011.
The project will conduct applied research in various risk contexts, including seismic vulnerability in Algeria and public health risks among internally displaced people in Uganda.
- Author: Helen Théron
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