Building a roadmap for inclusive disaster risk reduction in Australian communities

As a signatory to the Sendai Framework, Australia has committed to ensuring that the needs and voices of people with disability are included in disaster risk management and removing the barriers that stop people with disability from engaging with disaster risk reduction activities. In 2015, the path...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inProgress in disaster science Vol. 10; p. 100166
Main Author Villeneuve, Michelle
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.04.2021
Elsevier
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Summary:As a signatory to the Sendai Framework, Australia has committed to ensuring that the needs and voices of people with disability are included in disaster risk management and removing the barriers that stop people with disability from engaging with disaster risk reduction activities. In 2015, the pathways to achieving this and their feasibility were entirely unclear. This paper shares Australia’s progress on developing and advancing Disability Inclusive Disaster Risk Reduction (DIDRR) at the local community level through cross-sector collaboration and grassroots innovation. Over a 5-year period, this participatory research brought emergency managers together with people with disability and the community-based services that support them. Together we collected, analysed and interpreted data, worked out change strategies, implemented them, evaluated how they worked and repeated the cycle over a series of projects. The scope of this research encompassed inclusive community engagement and capacity development; combining practice wisdom and research evidence to develop DIDRR policy and practices that leave nobody behind. DIDRR progressed in three stages including: (a) identifying the scope for DIDRR and giving direction to emergency managers; (b) defining roles and responsibilities for people with disability and the services that support them; and (c) building cross sector mechanisms for sharing responsibility. An integrated approach to knowledge creation and dissemination offered an authentic way to value and combine scientific knowledge with “local knowledge” that is gained from experience and built from the ground up. Central to building a roadmap for DIDRR was the co-creation of tools guiding its implementation. The co-designed products that emerged and are currently being used to translate and scale DIDR practices across Australian communities managing in the context of the 2019–20 Black Summer bushfires and COVID-19 pandemic. •Grassroots innovation enabled inclusion of people with disability in DRR.•Partnership with a disability organisation was a turning point in inclusive DRR.•Multi-stakeholder collaboration enabled incremental changes in practice.•Emergency personnel shifted perspectives toward person-centred emergency planning.•Co-designed tools enabled communication between stakeholders and their networks.
ISSN:2590-0617
2590-0617
DOI:10.1016/j.pdisas.2021.100166