1 / 11

OECD Policy Handbook: Natural Hazard Awareness and Disaster Risk Reduction Education

This policy handbook provides a clear and concise tool to guide policymakers in promoting risk awareness and education for natural hazards. It focuses on principles, strategies, and good practices for building disaster resiliency and fostering a culture of safety.

Télécharger la présentation

OECD Policy Handbook: Natural Hazard Awareness and Disaster Risk Reduction Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OECD Policy Handbook Natural Hazard Awareness and Disaster Risk Reduction Education Prof. Alberto Monti Bocconi University and OECD Bangkok, Thailand 24-25 September 2009 2nd Conference of the OECD International Network on Financial Management on Large-Scale Catastrophes

  2. Background • Risk awareness identified as a priority • High-level Advisory Board to the International Network • OECD Insurance and Private Pensions Committee • Stocktaking of country initiatives • Selected OECD countries • China and India • Policy handbook • Clear, concise, policy-oriented tool • Guidance to policymakers (OECD and non-members) • Focus on natural hazards

  3. Structure • Preamble • Principles • Broad Strategy • Good Practices

  4. I. Preamble • Human-induced factors affect vulnerability and exposure • Public awareness of natural hazards and disaster risk reduction education are key • Foundation for sound financial management strategies • Need to shift from heavy emphasis on emergency response/citizen-preparedness to risk reduction • Hazard awareness and disaster risk reduction education required at every level of society • Promoting a culture of safety • Building disaster resiliency

  5. II. Principles • Key principles to inform risk awareness and risk reduction education strategies, including: • Risk-based prioritisation • Disaster risk transfer and financing mechanisms can enhance awareness and education • Risk communication techniques and actionable language • Messages regarding allocation of costs and disaster prevention responsibilities as a tool • Long-term and sustained strategy

  6. III. Broad strategy • Three-step approach for effective risk awareness and education strategies: • In-depth scientific assessment of natural hazards and disaster risks • Identification of desired behaviour and perception changes • Identification of respective roles of stakeholders, and appropriate tools and methods to educate stakeholders and induce action

  7. IV. Good practices • Government initiatives • Leadership and coordination • Assessment of risk awareness needs and identification of strategic priorities • Hazard mapping and risk assessment • Public awareness campaigns and events • National-level guidelines on public message content • Informational websites • Mass distribution of material • Museums, parks • Simulations and drills

  8. IV. Good practices • Educational system • Incorporation of risk awareness and risk reduction strategies into school curricula – educating the young is key • Multi-decade effort needed • Integration with community-based programmes • Private sector • Insurance sector • Education, data collection, risk mapping and modelling • Engineering, construction trade associations • Corporate sector (e.g., business continuity planning)

  9. IV. Good practices • Civic sector • Grassroots initiatives • International efforts • Reinforce international efforts (e.g., UN ISDR, UNESCO) • Improve global hazard mapping / risk modelling (e.g., GEM) • General strategies • Cross-sectoral collaboration (e.g., task forces, networks) • Outreach programmes to opinion-leaders • Community participation • Scaling up and sharing

  10. IV. Good practices • Effective communication and education tools • Clear and consistent messages • Non-technical language • Disaster risks placed in proper perspective • Promotion of awareness and action • Engaging format • Positive, empowering, and accurate examples • Targeting of multiple audiences • Multiple dissemination strategies

  11. ContactProf. Alberto MontiBocconi UniversityDepartment of Law «Angelo Sraffa»1, via Roentgen20136 - Milano (ITALY)E-mail: alberto.monti@unibocconi.itwww.unibocconi.eu www.oecd.org/daf/fin/catrisks

More Related