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Disaster Management, Developing Country Communities & Climate Change: The Role of ICTs

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Year: 
2011
Type of Publication: 
Paper
ICT Focus Areas: 
Access / Connectivity
Capacity Building
Disaster Preparedness & Response Systems
Climate Change Adaptation, eResilience
Related Member States: 
Cuba
Grenada
Jamaica

Author : Nonita Yap - University of Guelph, Canada

Executive Summary
 
Climate change presents two types of disaster threat in developing countries. One is the potentially devastating impacts on vulnerable communities of more frequent and
more intense extreme weather events. This contributes to the second threat, the compounding of what are already complex development problems leading to a potential
downward development spiral for the world’s poor. Effective disaster response demands rapid access to reliable and accurate data and the capacity to assess, analyse and integrate information from varied sources. ICTs can obviously help, and this paper focuses on the role of ICTs in reducing the impacts of acute climate-related events. The centrality of the community in effective disaster management is argued while acknowledging the important role of governments, donors, businesses, epistemic communities and NGOs. Some ICT applications in hydrometeorological disasters are described. That the majority of applications are funded externally raises concerns about further dependency and unsustainability but
the paper argues there are grounds for optimism.

Development of new wireless technologies; convergence of telecommunications, computing, and multi-media; multi-stakeholder partnerships; and the use of FOSS by socially minded ICT-savvy professionals are enabling greater standardisation and interoperability, more data availability, greater reach at lower costs, and to some extent transparency and accountability of disaster resource allocation and delivery.

The paper closes with some recommendations on how the use of ICTs in community-centred disaster management may be enhanced. ICT systems should be developed
that accommodate interoperation. Some of this, including a commitment tostandardised disaster data collection, could be mandated on NGOs and other local agencies by those that fund them. ICT systems should be based around routinely-used rather than specialised applications. Further, we recommend integration rather than specialisation: with climate change becoming an integral part of disaster management systems rather than separately catered-for; and with generic information systems being created that encompass both disaster and development purposes. Finally the paper argues that we also need to clarify how ICTs can address barriers to interagency coordination and collaboration, and how the new technologies can help evaluate the effectiveness and financial performance of disaster response programmes.