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From emergency to sustainability: the case of integrating disaster risk reduction in protracted refugee settings - case study from Kutupalong and Dadaab refugee camps

Morpeth, Anna LU (2021) VBRM15 20211
Division of Risk Management and Societal Safety
Abstract
In the last 20 years more than 7,300 disaster events were recorded across the world. Global trends indicated that in 2019 over 79 million people were displaced worldwide, 45 million were internally displaced and there were 26 million refugees. The nature of disasters is increasingly complex, uncertain and long lasting and refugees represent a growing community often disproportionately affected by natural hazards. Despite the recognition of the importance of
disaster risk reduction (DRR) on a national and institutional level, there exists a gap in conducting research specifically targeting the integration of DRR strategies in protracted crises and in particular protracted refugee settings (PRS). This research seeks to bridge the gap... (More)
In the last 20 years more than 7,300 disaster events were recorded across the world. Global trends indicated that in 2019 over 79 million people were displaced worldwide, 45 million were internally displaced and there were 26 million refugees. The nature of disasters is increasingly complex, uncertain and long lasting and refugees represent a growing community often disproportionately affected by natural hazards. Despite the recognition of the importance of
disaster risk reduction (DRR) on a national and institutional level, there exists a gap in conducting research specifically targeting the integration of DRR strategies in protracted crises and in particular protracted refugee settings (PRS). This research seeks to bridge the gap between diverging understandings of DRR and its use in the humanitarian system to foster better understanding as to why there is a lack of DRR strategies in PRS. Whilst natural hazards
cannot be prevented in their entirety, much can be done to reduce their impact on society. Using two case studies, this thesis sets out a comparative analysis identifying factors acting as barriers to enhancing the integration of DRR in PRS. Three factors are presented as challenges preventing a complete integration of DRR; a lack of risk awareness, structural limitations of the humanitarian system and funding shortcomings. (Less)
Popular Abstract
In the last 20 years more than 7,300 disaster events were recorded across the world. Global trends indicated that in 2019 over 79 million people were displaced worldwide, 45 million were internally displaced and there were 26 million refugees. The nature of disasters is increasingly complex, uncertain and long lasting and refugees represent a growing community often disproportionately affected by natural hazards. Despite the recognition of the importance of
disaster risk reduction (DRR) on a national and institutional level, there exists a gap in conducting research specifically targeting the integration of DRR strategies in protracted crises and in particular protracted refugee settings (PRS). This research seeks to bridge the gap... (More)
In the last 20 years more than 7,300 disaster events were recorded across the world. Global trends indicated that in 2019 over 79 million people were displaced worldwide, 45 million were internally displaced and there were 26 million refugees. The nature of disasters is increasingly complex, uncertain and long lasting and refugees represent a growing community often disproportionately affected by natural hazards. Despite the recognition of the importance of
disaster risk reduction (DRR) on a national and institutional level, there exists a gap in conducting research specifically targeting the integration of DRR strategies in protracted crises and in particular protracted refugee settings (PRS). This research seeks to bridge the gap between diverging understandings of DRR and its use in the humanitarian system to foster better understanding as to why there is a lack of DRR strategies in PRS. Whilst natural hazards
cannot be prevented in their entirety, much can be done to reduce their impact on society. Using two case studies, this thesis sets out a comparative analysis identifying factors acting as barriers to enhancing the integration of DRR in PRS. Three factors are presented as challenges preventing a complete integration of DRR; a lack of risk awareness, structural limitations of the humanitarian system and funding shortcomings. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Morpeth, Anna LU
supervisor
organization
course
VBRM15 20211
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Disaster risk reduction, protracted refugee settings, humanitarian system, funding, risk awareness.
language
English
id
9055993
date added to LUP
2021-06-17 14:04:38
date last changed
2021-06-17 14:45:49
@misc{9055993,
  abstract     = {{In the last 20 years more than 7,300 disaster events were recorded across the world. Global trends indicated that in 2019 over 79 million people were displaced worldwide, 45 million were internally displaced and there were 26 million refugees. The nature of disasters is increasingly complex, uncertain and long lasting and refugees represent a growing community often disproportionately affected by natural hazards. Despite the recognition of the importance of 
disaster risk reduction (DRR) on a national and institutional level, there exists a gap in conducting research specifically targeting the integration of DRR strategies in protracted crises and in particular protracted refugee settings (PRS). This research seeks to bridge the gap between diverging understandings of DRR and its use in the humanitarian system to foster better understanding as to why there is a lack of DRR strategies in PRS. Whilst natural hazards 
cannot be prevented in their entirety, much can be done to reduce their impact on society. Using two case studies, this thesis sets out a comparative analysis identifying factors acting as barriers to enhancing the integration of DRR in PRS. Three factors are presented as challenges preventing a complete integration of DRR; a lack of risk awareness, structural limitations of the humanitarian system and funding shortcomings.}},
  author       = {{Morpeth, Anna}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{From emergency to sustainability: the case of integrating disaster risk reduction in protracted refugee settings - case study from Kutupalong and Dadaab refugee camps}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}