[Radix] Feeling better, doing worse?

bwisner at igc.org bwisner at igc.org
Thu Feb 26 12:47:08 PST 2009


Great job on the op-ed piece, Jonatan!

As you probably know, at the global level the UN-ISDR has just finished the first draft of it's Global Assessment of Risk (GAR 2009).  Chapter 5 deals with implementation of the Hyogo Framework of Action.  Meanwhile, a global network of NGOs working on DRR is conducting a counterpoint, bottom up assessment of HFA implementation that mirrors the top down assessment summarized in GAR 2009.  The difference is that for the top down assessment some 98 national governments filled out an on line questionnaire telling the UN-ISDR how they had done on a five point scale at implementing several dozen specific tasks agreed under the HFA's five priority areas.  In the bottom up exercise, called "View from the Front Lines" (VFL), NGOs in 40 countries are getting a sample of localities to fill out a questionnaire that asks what evidence of any of the top down commitments are visible.

Comparing the two will be very revealing.

In a similar way, in your op-ed and in the Indonesian NGO report I had the honor to comment on, there is certainly progress to applaud, but at the same time, you and the report notes a continuing fetishization of engineering and natural science and reluctance to take on social issues.

That's sad, because as weak and confused as the HFA is, and as poor as implementation so far seems (even according to the draft GAR 2009 chapter), at least social imperatives such as provision of information and tools for planning to communities, risk awareness raising, and analysis of the impacts of mega-projects on nearby communities risk profile are there in the document.  The HFA is a document agreed to in 2005 by 168 countries including Indonesia, by the way!

How would you rate the chances that the Indonesian NGO critique will have an impact on the final draft of the government's guidelines?  If not, are there plans to lobby on this issue at the Global Platform meeting in Geneva in June?

All the best,

BEN

-----Original Message-----
>From: Jonatan Lassa <jonatan.lassa at gmail.com>
>Sent: Feb 26, 2009 7:11 AM
>To: forumacademiantt at yahoogroups.com, pikul at googlegroups.com, "global-ews-network at googlegroups.com" <global-ews-network at googlegroups.com>
>Subject: [Radix] Feeling better, doing worse?
>
>Dear all, it just came out today in the Jakarta Post....
>
>Feeling better, doing worse?
>
>http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2009/02/26/feeling-better-doing-worse.html
>
>Jonatan Lassa ,  Bonn   |  Thu, 02/26/2009 1:58 PM  |  Opinion
>
>There is an increasing trend of social economic losses in "natural"
>disasters due to the rising number of natural hazard incidents
>together with the increasingly vulnerable population in Indonesia.
>
>The United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction
>(UNISDR) jointly with Leuven Catholic University's Center for Research
>on Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) reported recently that 2008 showed
>an increase in the number of deaths and economic losses compared to
>the 2000-2007 yearly average.
>
>The recent 7.2-magnitude earthquake (S.R.) in the Talaud Islands
>regency in North Sulawesi, that caused hundreds of injuries and damage
>to 500 buildings according to the national media, show one important
>lesson. The people not only live in a vulnerable environment in regard
>to housing and infrastructure but also lack the infrastructure to
>react quickly to the warning of a potential tsunami.
>
>We witness floods in many pro-vinces in Indonesia today, which cause
>losses and damage to livelihood, life and infrastructure, coming
>together with "the unpleasant guests" such as dengue, malaria and
>diarrhea (see The Jakarta Post , Feb. 14). Hence, one may be wrong
>asserting that Indonesia is not moving forward to reduce disaster
>risks amid the increasing trend of disaster risks.
>
>On the other hand, one may share the optimistic view, asserting that
>Indonesia is getting better, or far better, at disaster risk
>management today than in the past. In terms of laws and regulations
>concerning disaster risks, under the auspices of the National Disaster
>Management Law 24/2007, followed by various ancillary regulations such
>as the set up of the National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB)
>through Presidential Regulation 8/2008 and the government regulation
>for Disaster Management Implementation 21/2008, Indonesia has gained
>new momentum for a better risk management policy.
>
>But why do many people feel worse when the government is doing better
>in anticipating natural disasters? This question was once asked by
>Aaron Wildavsky in 1977 within the United States' context in his
>famous paper Doing Better and Feeling Worse: The Political Patho-logy
>of Health Policy, published by MIT Press. It later became known as the
>Wildavsky paradox.
>
>But in the Indonesian context today, the paradox can actually be
>reversed "why are we feeling better while actually we are not doing
>enough?"
>
>Recent efforts by the BNPB to take the first step in disaster risk
>reduction, that is, the draft of the National Guidelines for Disaster
>Risk Assessment (hereinafter NG-DRA) clearly validates the English
>saying "the devil is in the details." Therefore, the optimistic view
>may miss the fact of the shortcomings of the NG-DRA draft.
>
>The critical point of this article is to propound why Indonesia needs
>better national guidelines for the better practice of disaster risk
>assessment. The notion that disaster risk assessment is the first step
>towards better disaster risk management planning has been long held by
>many international scientists working on disaster risk assessment.
>
>The first step is crucial, as it will drive operational policy in the
>field to reduce future risk, so we and our children may enjoy less
>disaster risk in the future.
>
>On the contrary, just recently, the BNPB, supported by the Safer
>Communities for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDP), recruited seven
>natural/physical scientists and engineering experts to the NG-DRA for
>seven selected hazards (i.e. earthquake, tsunami, drought, forest
>fire, flood, landslide and volcano).
>
>The NG-DRA is one of the top priorities of the BNPB that will later be
>used by at least 410 regencies and municipalities and 33 provinces.
>Therefore the NG-DRA is both necessary, important and strategic to the
>BNPB office, to complete the national guidelines for disaster risk
>assessment as the benchmark of national disaster risk management
>planning.
>
>Unfortunatelly, the draft guidelines for disaster risk assessment only
>recognise the physical events of natural hazards. It does not touch on
>the social, economic, cultural, political and environmental aspects of
>disasters. The models offered as the national guidelines for risk
>analysis/assessment fail to adopt the latest knowledge and latest
>empirical research results concerning disaster risk and disaster risk
>analysis.
>
>It fails to recognise the unequal distribution of the death toll in
>the Indian Ocean tsunami between men and women showed that there is a
>social and non-natural component in disaster risk.
>
>At least four empirical researches were done in Aceh and Sri Lanka and
>all came out with the convincing results that women's survival rate is
>far less than men's. Thus, integrating gender as an important factor
>that shapes the distribution of risk can no longer be seen as optional
>but imperative.
>
>Gender analysis of risk does not appear in the draft NG-DRA
>guidelines. The guidelines also fail to recognise the interplay of
>gender, age and economic vulnerability which may result in greater
>risks.
>
>The shortcoming of the guidelines may come from the assumption that
>the science of doing disaster risk assessment does not really need
>social sciences contribution but natural science alone.
>
>Therefore, disaster risk assessment taking into account the physical
>aspects of natural hazards without taking adequate account of the
>multiple vulnerabilities will guide Indonesia's reform processes
>toward ineffective and unsustainable disaster risk reduction (DRR)
>practices and will move the country backward, not forward.
>
>The writer is a Ph.D candidate with research focus on Disaster Risk
>Governance at the University of Bonn.
>_______________________________________________
>This mailing list is provided by ECIE.ORG for RADIX
>To post a message, send it to: radix at ecie.org
>To subscribe or unsubscribe visit:
>http://ecie.org/mailman/listinfo/radix
>See more information about ECIE:  http://www.ecie.org/
>Radix - Radical Interpretations of Disaster:
>http://www.radixonline.org/
@


More information about the Radix mailing list