1 / 20

" Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“

Flood Conference – ICLR, May 6-8, 2008, Toronto, Canada Assessment of Social Vulnerability at Sub-national Scale Dr.-Ing. Jörn Birkmann & Alexander Fekete. " Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“ United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security

meriel
Télécharger la présentation

" Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“

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. Flood Conference – ICLR, May 6-8, 2008, Toronto, Canada Assessment of Social Vulnerability at Sub-national Scale Dr.-Ing. Jörn Birkmann & Alexander Fekete "Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“ United Nations UniversityInstitute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  2. Content • Motivation • Vulnerability – Different Schools of Thought • Conceptual Framework • Assessment Process for the Sub-National Level • Data Limitations • Scale Issues • Conclusions Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  3. Understanding of Vulnerability Fundamental Equation of Risk Analysis consequences due to flooding [EUR] risk = probability of failure of coastal defences [1/a] X Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Source: Stephan Mai 2006

  4. Expected Damage total economic value Euro/m² Source: Stephan Mai 2006 Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  5. Social Vulnerability • Tsunami 2004: Gender imbalance • Katrina 2005: Institutional failure; but also ethnical • Banat flood 2005: Cultural acquaintance; - duration Sri Lanka New Orleans - Superdome www.hurricanekatrina.com www.ukim.org Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  6. Vulnerability Definitions “... a human condition or process resulting from physical, social, economic, and environmental factors which determine the likelihood and scale of damage from the impact of a given hazard“ (UNDP, 2004) “... the likelihood of injury, death, loss, disruption of livelihood or other harm in an extreme event, and/or unusual difficulties in recovering from such effects“ (Wisner, 2002) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  7. Social Vulnerability in Germany • Are some social groups more vulnerable ? Baseline social problems in Germany: • Unemployment • Migration; ethnic integration; racism • Ageing of the population; pension security • Relative poverty gap Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  8. Project DISFLOOD Boundary-Conditions • Data availability for the whole research area • End-user:- Administrative units • Target definition- Comparability- Completeness • Identify social and ecological vulnerability • Interlink vulnerability to hazard • Provide overview for 3 river-areas • GIS Integration Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  9. The BBC-Framework Source: Bogardi/Birkmann (2004) and Cardona (1999/2001) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  10. Social Vulnerability Index -Criteria Exposure Potential • People • Settlement area Sensitivity • Unemployment, welfare dependence • Ethnic and economic conditions • Age, dependency, gender Capacities • Income and building type • Education and medical supply • Physical vitality Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  11. Social Vulnerability Index • Input: 34 variables of Federal statistical data 2006 • Method: Factor analysis, with varimax rotation • Result: 4 Composite factors that indicate vulnerability • Income • Population density • Physical fragility, age • Lack of medical care Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  12. General Social Vulnerability Index Which social groups are more vulnerable? • 34 demographic variablese.g. age, education, income • Map shows general vulnerability • Comparable studies on county level in USA, UK, Spain, Germany Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Data: Federal statistical office 2007, BKG 2007

  13. Ecological Vulnerability Aggregation to county scale enables integration DISFLOOD - Marion Damm Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  14. Hazard-Specific Vulnerability • Flood experience • Critical infrastructure • Early warning systems Scale implications: Availability only for certain areas Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  15. Exposure-Degree • Percentage of flooded settlement area per county Data: CORINE 2000, HQ extreme IKSR 2001 Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  16. Integration: Hazards & Vulnerability Risk = f(hazards; vulnerabilities) Vulnerability = exposure, sensitivity, capacities = the internal predisposition Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  17. Outlook - Disaster Risk Index • Combines social and ecological vulnerability • Combines hazard and vulnerability parameters • Data is normalised, • equal weighting, • ranks after standard deviations Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  18. HIERARCHY Constraints level: e.g. economic and political dynamics of the country Level of focus: Vulnerability Phenomenon Reductionist components: Validation by household questionnaire Lit.: Gibson et al. 2000, O‘Neill 1988 Scale Implications • Multiple-scale problems Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  19. Scale of the Hazard City of Cologne Scale implication: Extreme event data more suitable for sub-national scale Legend: Blue line: HQ100 Blue area: HQ extreme Symbols: Infrastructure Outlook: more detailed study on local level – BBK study (Birkmann) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Fekete 2007

  20. www.ehs.unu.edu Literature/Reports birkmann@ehs.unu.edu & fekete@ehs.unu.edu Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

More Related