Invited perspectives: Building sustainable and resilient communities – recommended actions for natural hazard scientists
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Published:2021-01-19
Issue:1
Volume:21
Page:187-202
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ISSN:1684-9981
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Container-title:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Gill Joel C.ORCID, Taylor Faith E.ORCID, Duncan Melanie J., Mohadjer SolmazORCID, Budimir Mirianna, Mdala Hassan, Bukachi Vera
Abstract
Abstract. Reducing disaster risk is critical to securing the
ambitions of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and natural hazard
scientists make a key contribution to achieving this aim. Understanding
Earth processes and dynamics underpins hazard analysis, which (alongside
analysis of other disaster risk drivers) informs the actions required to
manage and reduce disaster risk. Here we suggest how natural hazard research
scientists can better contribute to the planning and development of
sustainable and resilient communities through improved engagement in
disaster risk reduction (DRR). Building on existing good practice, this
perspective piece aims to provoke discussion in the natural hazard science
community about how we can strengthen our engagement in DRR. We set out
seven recommendations for enhancing the integration of natural hazard
science into DRR: (i) characterise multi-hazard environments; (ii) prioritise effective, positive, long-term partnerships; (iii) understand and
listen to your stakeholders; (iv) embed cultural understanding into natural
hazard research; (v) ensure improved and equitable access to hazard
information; (vi) champion people-centred DRR (leaving no one behind); and
(vii) improve links between DRR and sustainable development. We then proceed
to synthesise key actions that natural hazard scientists and research
funders should consider taking to improve education, training, and research
design and to strengthen institutional, financial, and policy actions. We
suggest that these actions should help to strengthen the effective
application of natural hazard science to reduce disaster risk. By
recognising and taking steps to address the issues raised in these
recommendations, we propose that the natural hazard science community can
more effectively contribute to the inter-/transdisciplinary, integrated work
required to improve DRR.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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