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Views and approaches to
       disasters
    From ancient period to to-date
      Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema
          Assistant Professor
          SZABIST, Islamabad
            March 4, 2013
Approaches to disasters

        • Exercising of deliberate choices to avoid and
          lessen the risk from disasters is not a recent
          phenomenon.
        • However, the evolution of this thinking, and of
          these social choices, views and approaches
          have been far from similar in different
          societies and within societies at the same
          time.

                                                      2
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Views and approaches to deal with disasters




                                             3
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Religious views and approaches

        • The original Latin meaning is star. In this context,
          disasters have been related with the movement
          of stars, in particular, ―ill-starred‖ (Gibson, 2006,
          p. 9).
        • The story of the Prophet Yusuf (PBUH) in the
          Koran (Chapter 12), referred to as Prophet Joseph
          in Christian and Jewish scriptures, describes food
          rationing and storage to save people from
          drought and famine, around 1500 B.C.

                                                           4
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Religious views and approaches (contd.)

        • Coppola (2007, p. 3) notes the example of two towns in
          Italy, Herculaneum and Pompeii, which faced a volcanic
          eruption in AD 79 from Mount Vesuvius.

        • The leaders of Pompeii coordinated the evacuation of
          the residents of the town many hours before
          pyroclastic flows approached their town and thus
          saved many lives, even though the city was buried in
          the ash.

        • The inhabitants of Herculaneum, however, could not
          survive since the town was at the base of the Mount
          and pyroclastic flows overtook the town in no time.
                                                            5
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Religious views and approaches (contd.)

        • An English clergyman, Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–
          1834), shared his view of disasters as acts of God while
          suggesting that nature would take away the excess
          population if human beings did not observe moral
          restraint.

        • If human beings exceed the availability of food on
          earth, nature would balance the proportion of human
          beings and food by removing the surplus number of
          humans through floods, droughts, diseases, famines
          and wars (Malthus, 1958, pp. 5-11).

                                                               6
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Religious views and approaches (contd.)

      • In the 18th century a major earthquake struck the
        Portuguese city of Lisbon on November 1, 1775,
        resulting in widespread destruction (Quarantelli, 2009,
         p. 10).

      • Voltaire (1694–1778)

                   Did fallen Lisbon deeper drink of vice
                   Than London, Paris, or sunlit Madrid?
                   In these, men dance; at Lisbon yawns the abyss
                                                                    7
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Technocratic views and technical approaches

             • Technocratic views, from the mid-20th century
               until the end of 1970s, treated hazards and
               disasters as separate and discrete from the social
               domain of human environment and perceived
               them only as a result of geophysical processes
               (Haque & Etkin, 2007).

             • The emphasis in the early 20th century remained
               on understanding geographical features such as
               location, frequency, intensity and probability of
               events.

                                                              8
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Technocratic views and technical approaches
                               (contd.)

        • Paradoxically, such measures resulted in an
          increase in losses due to a false sense of full
          control over disasters.


        • Technocrats‘ expertise was trusted blindly in
          some cases, as in the example of Saint-Pierre,
          Mont Pelée, 30,000 people on the West Indian
          Island of Martinique on May 8, 1902.

                                                        9
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Technocratic views and technical approaches
                               (contd.)
    • Overall, the central argument in this approach was that
      nature could be controlled by understanding its physical
      characteristics through scientific inquiry along with
      traditional disaster reduction measures such as warnings
      insurance and emergency relief.

    • Therefore, based on scientific input, the main
      responsibility for dealing with natural hazards remained
       in the domain of the state.


                                                         10
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                                 approaches
   • In the last quarter of the 20th century, the dominant
     paradigm, mostly applying scientific solutions, began
     to be challenged in disaster studies.

   • Inadequate consideration of the full social costs … dams
     not only increased the vulnerability of displaced
     populations, damaged natural resources, livelihoods and,
     habitat…the benefits proved to be short-lived and out-
     numbered by losses.


                                                         11
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                            approaches (contd.)
        • Cuny (1983) argued that the rise in disaster-related
          losses was strongly related to the vulnerability caused
          by human-inspired development.

        • Cuny (1983, p. 14) noted that only 48 people were
          reported dead during an earthquake of 6.4 magnitude
          in San Fernando, California in 1971.

        • The city had a population of about seven million. On
          the other hand, six thousand people died during an
          earthquake of 6.2 magnitude in Managua, Nicaragua,
          two years later.

                                                              12
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                            approaches (contd.)
        • The term ―natural disasters‖ was strongly
          opposed (Twigg, 2004). It was argued that only
          natural hazards exist, not natural disasters, and a
          disaster occurred when a group of people were
          struck by a hazard of such magnitude that it was
          beyond their capability to cope (Twigg, 2004).

        • The alternative view of disasters guided by the
          vulnerability perspective view criticised the
          dominant paradigm for ignoring the role of
          vulnerability.

                                                          13
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                            approaches (contd.)
        • Comparing the 1976 earthquake of Guatemala with
          that of Hurricane Katrina, similar patterns of
          vulnerability appear. In the Guatemala earthquake,
          90,000 people became homeless and as the majority of
          victims were slum residents, it was called a class
          earthquake (Twigg, 2004, p. 16).

        • In both cases, economic pressures had left people with
          no choice except to settle in cheap but risky areas. It
          becomes evident that vulnerability is often a
          compulsion rather than a choice.

                                                             14
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                            approaches (contd.)
        • Disaster risk was not viewed only as the result of
          purely geophysical and natural processes but as a
          compound function of hazards and vulnerability.

        • The new conceptualisation of ―disaster risk
          articulated that risk was a product of hazard and
          vulnerability (Wisner et al., 2004, p. 49)

               Risk = Hazard x Vulnerability

                                                        15
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Holistic views and integrated
                            approaches (contd.)
        • Another way of looking at reduction of
          vulnerability to hazards is by increasing the
          capacity or capability and resilience of people.




                                                        16
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
Explanation of the terms vulnerability, capacity and resilience




                                                           17
 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
International Trends
  towards Disaster
   Risk Reduction

      Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST,
                                         18
                  Islamabad
International Trends

        • At the international level, concerted efforts to
          reduce disaster losses were highlighted when
          the UN designated the 1990s as the United
          Nations International Decade for Natural
          Disaster Risk Reduction




                                                        19
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
International Trends
        • Mid-term review in 1994

        • Yokohama strategy for disaster reduction was
          adopted at a world conference, and the
          human dimension of disasters was
          incorporated, at least theoretically.



                                                   20
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
References
        •    Anderson, B., & Woodrow, P. (1989). Rising from the ashes: Development strategies in times of disaster. Boulder: Westview
             Press.
        •    Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., Davis, I., & Wisner, B. (1994). At risk: Natural hazards, peoples' vulnerabilities and disasters (Ist ed.).
             London: Rutledge.
        •    Cutter, S. L., Boruff, B. J., & Shirley, W. L. (2003). Social vulnerability to environmental hazards. Social Science Quarterly, 84(2),
             242-261.
        •    Cutter, S. (2006, June 11). The geography of social vulnerability: Race, class, and catastrophe. Social Science Research
             Council. Retrieved October 28, 2011, from http://understandingkatrina.ssrc.org/Cutter/
        •    Gaillard, J. C. (2010). Vulnerability, capacity and resilience: Perspectives for climate and development policy. Journal of
             International Development, 22(2), 218-232.
        •    Haque, C., & Etkin, D. (2007). People and community as constituent parts of hazards: the significance of societal dimensions
             in hazards analysis. Natural Hazards, 41(2), 271-282.
        •    Haque, C. E. (2003). Perspectives of natural disasters in East and South Asia, and the Pacific Island states: Socio-economic
             correlates and needs assessment. Natural Hazards, 29(3), 465-483.
        •    Hewitt, K. (1983). The idea of calamity in a technocratic age. In K. Hewitt (Ed.), Interpretations of calamity (pp. 3-32, 123-
             139). Boston: Allen & Unwin Inc.
        •    Pasteur, K. (2011). From vulnerability to resilience: A framework for analysis and action to build community resilience.
             Warwickshire: Practical Action.
        •    Pooley, J. A., Cohen, L., & O'Connor, M. (2006). Links between community and individual resilience: Evidence from cyclone
             affected communities in North West Australia. In D. Paton & D. Johnston (Eds.), Disater resilience: An integrated approach
             (pp. 161-173). Illionois: Charles C Thomas.




                                                                                                                                         21
Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad

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Views and approaches to disasters:From ancient period to to-date

  • 1. Views and approaches to disasters From ancient period to to-date Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema Assistant Professor SZABIST, Islamabad March 4, 2013
  • 2. Approaches to disasters • Exercising of deliberate choices to avoid and lessen the risk from disasters is not a recent phenomenon. • However, the evolution of this thinking, and of these social choices, views and approaches have been far from similar in different societies and within societies at the same time. 2 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 3. Views and approaches to deal with disasters 3 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 4. Religious views and approaches • The original Latin meaning is star. In this context, disasters have been related with the movement of stars, in particular, ―ill-starred‖ (Gibson, 2006, p. 9). • The story of the Prophet Yusuf (PBUH) in the Koran (Chapter 12), referred to as Prophet Joseph in Christian and Jewish scriptures, describes food rationing and storage to save people from drought and famine, around 1500 B.C. 4 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 5. Religious views and approaches (contd.) • Coppola (2007, p. 3) notes the example of two towns in Italy, Herculaneum and Pompeii, which faced a volcanic eruption in AD 79 from Mount Vesuvius. • The leaders of Pompeii coordinated the evacuation of the residents of the town many hours before pyroclastic flows approached their town and thus saved many lives, even though the city was buried in the ash. • The inhabitants of Herculaneum, however, could not survive since the town was at the base of the Mount and pyroclastic flows overtook the town in no time. 5 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 6. Religious views and approaches (contd.) • An English clergyman, Thomas Robert Malthus (1766– 1834), shared his view of disasters as acts of God while suggesting that nature would take away the excess population if human beings did not observe moral restraint. • If human beings exceed the availability of food on earth, nature would balance the proportion of human beings and food by removing the surplus number of humans through floods, droughts, diseases, famines and wars (Malthus, 1958, pp. 5-11). 6 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 7. Religious views and approaches (contd.) • In the 18th century a major earthquake struck the Portuguese city of Lisbon on November 1, 1775, resulting in widespread destruction (Quarantelli, 2009, p. 10). • Voltaire (1694–1778) Did fallen Lisbon deeper drink of vice Than London, Paris, or sunlit Madrid? In these, men dance; at Lisbon yawns the abyss 7 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 8. Technocratic views and technical approaches • Technocratic views, from the mid-20th century until the end of 1970s, treated hazards and disasters as separate and discrete from the social domain of human environment and perceived them only as a result of geophysical processes (Haque & Etkin, 2007). • The emphasis in the early 20th century remained on understanding geographical features such as location, frequency, intensity and probability of events. 8 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 9. Technocratic views and technical approaches (contd.) • Paradoxically, such measures resulted in an increase in losses due to a false sense of full control over disasters. • Technocrats‘ expertise was trusted blindly in some cases, as in the example of Saint-Pierre, Mont Pelée, 30,000 people on the West Indian Island of Martinique on May 8, 1902. 9 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 10. Technocratic views and technical approaches (contd.) • Overall, the central argument in this approach was that nature could be controlled by understanding its physical characteristics through scientific inquiry along with traditional disaster reduction measures such as warnings insurance and emergency relief. • Therefore, based on scientific input, the main responsibility for dealing with natural hazards remained in the domain of the state. 10 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 11. Holistic views and integrated approaches • In the last quarter of the 20th century, the dominant paradigm, mostly applying scientific solutions, began to be challenged in disaster studies. • Inadequate consideration of the full social costs … dams not only increased the vulnerability of displaced populations, damaged natural resources, livelihoods and, habitat…the benefits proved to be short-lived and out- numbered by losses. 11 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 12. Holistic views and integrated approaches (contd.) • Cuny (1983) argued that the rise in disaster-related losses was strongly related to the vulnerability caused by human-inspired development. • Cuny (1983, p. 14) noted that only 48 people were reported dead during an earthquake of 6.4 magnitude in San Fernando, California in 1971. • The city had a population of about seven million. On the other hand, six thousand people died during an earthquake of 6.2 magnitude in Managua, Nicaragua, two years later. 12 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 13. Holistic views and integrated approaches (contd.) • The term ―natural disasters‖ was strongly opposed (Twigg, 2004). It was argued that only natural hazards exist, not natural disasters, and a disaster occurred when a group of people were struck by a hazard of such magnitude that it was beyond their capability to cope (Twigg, 2004). • The alternative view of disasters guided by the vulnerability perspective view criticised the dominant paradigm for ignoring the role of vulnerability. 13 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 14. Holistic views and integrated approaches (contd.) • Comparing the 1976 earthquake of Guatemala with that of Hurricane Katrina, similar patterns of vulnerability appear. In the Guatemala earthquake, 90,000 people became homeless and as the majority of victims were slum residents, it was called a class earthquake (Twigg, 2004, p. 16). • In both cases, economic pressures had left people with no choice except to settle in cheap but risky areas. It becomes evident that vulnerability is often a compulsion rather than a choice. 14 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 15. Holistic views and integrated approaches (contd.) • Disaster risk was not viewed only as the result of purely geophysical and natural processes but as a compound function of hazards and vulnerability. • The new conceptualisation of ―disaster risk articulated that risk was a product of hazard and vulnerability (Wisner et al., 2004, p. 49) Risk = Hazard x Vulnerability 15 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 16. Holistic views and integrated approaches (contd.) • Another way of looking at reduction of vulnerability to hazards is by increasing the capacity or capability and resilience of people. 16 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 17. Explanation of the terms vulnerability, capacity and resilience 17 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 18. International Trends towards Disaster Risk Reduction Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, 18 Islamabad
  • 19. International Trends • At the international level, concerted efforts to reduce disaster losses were highlighted when the UN designated the 1990s as the United Nations International Decade for Natural Disaster Risk Reduction 19 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 20. International Trends • Mid-term review in 1994 • Yokohama strategy for disaster reduction was adopted at a world conference, and the human dimension of disasters was incorporated, at least theoretically. 20 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad
  • 21. References • Anderson, B., & Woodrow, P. (1989). Rising from the ashes: Development strategies in times of disaster. Boulder: Westview Press. • Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., Davis, I., & Wisner, B. (1994). At risk: Natural hazards, peoples' vulnerabilities and disasters (Ist ed.). London: Rutledge. • Cutter, S. L., Boruff, B. J., & Shirley, W. L. (2003). Social vulnerability to environmental hazards. Social Science Quarterly, 84(2), 242-261. • Cutter, S. (2006, June 11). The geography of social vulnerability: Race, class, and catastrophe. Social Science Research Council. Retrieved October 28, 2011, from http://understandingkatrina.ssrc.org/Cutter/ • Gaillard, J. C. (2010). Vulnerability, capacity and resilience: Perspectives for climate and development policy. Journal of International Development, 22(2), 218-232. • Haque, C., & Etkin, D. (2007). People and community as constituent parts of hazards: the significance of societal dimensions in hazards analysis. Natural Hazards, 41(2), 271-282. • Haque, C. E. (2003). Perspectives of natural disasters in East and South Asia, and the Pacific Island states: Socio-economic correlates and needs assessment. Natural Hazards, 29(3), 465-483. • Hewitt, K. (1983). The idea of calamity in a technocratic age. In K. Hewitt (Ed.), Interpretations of calamity (pp. 3-32, 123- 139). Boston: Allen & Unwin Inc. • Pasteur, K. (2011). From vulnerability to resilience: A framework for analysis and action to build community resilience. Warwickshire: Practical Action. • Pooley, J. A., Cohen, L., & O'Connor, M. (2006). Links between community and individual resilience: Evidence from cyclone affected communities in North West Australia. In D. Paton & D. Johnston (Eds.), Disater resilience: An integrated approach (pp. 161-173). Illionois: Charles C Thomas. 21 Dr Abdur Rehman Cheema, SZABIST, Islamabad