272 research outputs found
TalkFutures: Supporting Qualitative Practices in Distributed Community Engagements
Community engagements are qualitative processes that make use of participants local knowledge for democratic decision-making, but often exclude participants from data analysis and dissemination. This can mean that they are left feeling that their voice is not properly represented in the final output. This paper presents a digital community engagement process, TalkFutures, that actively involves participants in the production, distributed analysis and summarization of qualitative data. The design of TalkFutures was explored through a five-week deployment with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) as part of a consultation designed to inform future strategy. Our analysis of deployment metrics and post-deployment interviews outline how TalkFutures: (i) increased modes of participation across the qualitative workflow; (ii) reduced barriers to participation; and (iii) improved representation in the engagement processes
Guidance Brief: How to maximise the use of social sciences evidence for public health emergencies in humanitarian settings
In humanitarian settings, public health emergencies (PHE) are often one of many crises facing communities, governments and response actors. Evidence from the social sciences and other disciplines can inform decisions about effective actions and interventions in response to these events.
To maximise the chance that evidence during PHE impacts those affected, it must be useful and usable to those involved. These âend usersâ of evidence may include government or non-governmental actors, UN or academic researchers, civil society groups, and communities.
Aim of this brief
This brief draws on the collective experience of social scientists with experience in operational and implementation research for public health emergencies in humanitarian settings to highlight some practical guidelines and suggestions for ensuring that evidence can influence change. Through concrete examples and links to tools, this brief is designed to support teams in generating and presenting robust, credible, and reliable social sciences evidence to inform public health responses in humanitarian contexts.
Audience: The target audience for this brief is field teams working in humanitarian settings who conduct social science research that aims to improve the operational response to public health emergencies
A dataset for the flood vulnerability assessment of the upper Cross River basin using morphometric analysis
The on-site collection of data is not only time consuming, but
expensive and perhaps near impossible in restive communities
within the upper Cross River basin (UCRB). Therefore, the importance
of this data cannot be overemphasized. This article presents
a Digital Elevation Model (DEM), land use and land cover (LULC)
map, soil map, geology map and climatic datasets which enhance
the understanding of the physical characteristics of the upper
Cross River basin using morphometric analysis. The use of the
LULC map, soil map and the DEM in conjunction with the climatic
data enhance the creation of the Hydrologic Response Units
(HRUs) and the water balance modelling. The simulation of the
water balance at the HRU level enables the routing of the runoff to
the reaches of the sub-basins and then to the channels. The geology
map provides confirmatory information to the morphometric
analysis. The compound factor computed from all the
derived morphometric parameters enhance the determination of
the overall flood potential of the congruent sub-basins
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Gendered and generational tensions in increased land commercialisation: rural livelihood diversification, changing land use, and food security in Ghanaâs Brong-Ahafo region
Many smallholder farmers in Jaman North District, BrongâAhafo Region, Ghana are shifting from food crop production to increased cultivation of cashew, an export cash crop. This paper examines gendered and generational tensions in increased commercialisation of land, livelihood diversification, and household food security in the context of globalisation and environmental change. Using qualitative, participatory research with 60 middleâgeneration men and women, young people and key stakeholders, the research found that community members valued the additional income stream. Young people and women, however, were apprehensive about the longâterm consequences for food security of allocating so much land to cashew plantations. Young, middle, and older generations were concerned about their weak bargaining position in negotiating fair prices with export companies and intermediaries. Greater integration into the global economy exposed rural actors to multiple risks and inequalities, such as the uneven effects of economic globalisation, rises in food prices, hunger and food insecurity, growing competition for land, youth outmigration and climate change. The shift towards cashew cultivation appears to be exacerbating gender and generational inequalities in access to land and food insecurity and leading to exploitation within the global agriâfood supply chain among already vulnerable rural communities in the global South. With stronger farmer associations and cooperatives, however, cashew farmers stand the chance of benefitting from greater integration into the global economy, through strengthened bargaining positions. Greater understanding is needed about the complex interactions between sustainable food systems, changing land use and gender and generational inequalities in rural spaces
The mechanism of disaster capitalism and the failure to build community resilience:learning from the 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy
This paper reflects on what materialised during recovery operations following the earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy, on 6 April 2009. Previous critiques have focused on the actions of the Government of Italy and the Department of Civil Protection (Protezione Civile), with little attention paid to the role of local authorities. This analysis sheds light on how the latter used emergency powers, the command-and-control approach, and top-down planning to manage the disaster context, especially in terms of removal of rubble, implementing safety measures, and allocating temporary accommodation. It discusses how these arrangements constituted the mechanism via which âdisaster capitalismâ took hold at the local and national level, and how it violated human rights, produced environmental and social impacts, hindered local communities from learning, transforming, and building resilience, and facilitated disaster capitalism and corruption. To make the disaster risk reduction and resilience paradigm more effective, a shift from centralised civil protection to decentralised, inclusive community empowerment systems is needed
Haiti: Earthquake -12-month Operation Update, Emergency Appeal â: MDRHT018
The Haiti Red Cross Society (HRCS) advanced with relief and response efforts to support the public authorities in the response actions after the 14 August 2021 earthquake. The population of Haiti continues to face a deterioration of humanitarian conditions, civil unrest, and insecurity. Despite the multiple and complex challenges, the different teams of the Red Cross Movement are delivering key humanitarian assistance to the population targeted by this appeal, including: Shelter: 27,150 people (5,430 households) reached through household items or multi-sector family kits that contained 2 tarpaulins, 1 shelter tool kit, 2 blankets, 2 long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLIN), 1 hygiene kit, 2 jerry cans and 1 bucket. Health: 6,696 people reached by Red Cross Emergency Hospital services in Les Cayes from 29 August until 30 November 2021 with deployments from the Finnish Red Cross, supported by the Canadian Red Cross, French Red Cross, German Red Cross, Japanese Red Cross and Swedish Red Cross, and the Hong Kong Branch of Red Cross Society of China
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Regulating disasters? The role of international law in disaster prevention and management
Purpose â This article explores the role of international law in disaster prevention and management, with a particular focus on the emerging field of international disaster law, and its relationship with international human rights law. It further introduces the four articles of the special column of this journal issue, dedicated to disasters and international law.
Design/methodology/approach â The analysis is based upon primary sources of legislation and policy, as well as academic literature on disasters and international law.
Findings â Although the field of international disaster law is at its infancy, we argue that this emergent area does have the potential to gain widespread recognition as a distinct field of law, and that this could be of benefit for the wider disaster management community.
Originality/value â The article introduces key legal features and themes relating to international law and disasters, highlighting their relevance for disaster management. The added value is to widen the discussion on aspects of disasters regulated by international law, thus facilitating the future exchange with other academic subjects and operational fields.
Keywords â disasters; international law; disaster management; treaties; human rights; international disaster law; international human rights law.
Paper type â Research pape
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