INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY RESILIENCE

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INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY RESILIENCE Empowering communities for resilience What We Do Integrate citizen engagement, social inclusion, and gender into disaster and climate risk management investments. Engage large-scale country programs that provide resources directly to poor households and communities in order to strengthen resilience to disaster. Generate and share evidence on effective, community-driven disaster and climate risk management, and promote community voices in global dialogue. Through the Inclusive Community Resilience (ICR) initiative, GFDRR taps into grassroots expertise in disaster risk management and promotes scalable models that engage directly with communities, making them equal partners with governments. In the event of disaster, studies show that 90% of survivors are rescued by their own neighbors. This core community strength in responding to and protecting against natural hazards and climate change is at the center of the ICR initiative. $3 BILLION INVESTMENTS PER YEAR REACHING 0 MILLION PEOPLE SO FAR GFDRR is helping shape and leverage the World Bank's community-driven development portfolio

APPROACH INVESTING IN COMMUNITY RESILIENCE By bringing disaster and climate risk management into large-scale country investment operations, ICR helps to channel risk management resources directly to poor households and communities. For example, in the Philippines, ICR is training people in selected villages on risk management and community mapping and is drawing on local knowledge as part of the effort. This information is then shared with all community members, who factor it into overall investment decisions in a broader community-driven development program. The end goal is to expand this initiative to all villages included in the program, in some 00 municipalities. PROMOTING SOCIAL INCLUSION Integrating citizen engagement and gender into investments. Through ICR's Gender Action Plan, GFDRR is bolstering its commitment to integrating gender issues into climate and disaster risk management efforts by: Understanding and addressing the different needs of men and women in disaster risk management investments; and Promoting women s empowerment for broader resilience strengthening. DEVELOPING AN EVIDENCE BASE ICR places a high priority on documenting and sharing evidence on successful community-driven disaster and climate risk management approaches. The ICR initiative supports the Community Practitioners Platform for Resilience a network of grassroots organizations with a focus on community resilience in documenting the role of women in strengthening disaster and climate resilience in their communities. In Guatemala, for example, the network helped launch a reforestation program, led by women in highland communities, after Tropical Storm Agatha damaged the ecosystem and cut water supplies. Using trees that purify water and contain erosion, the project rebuilt water supplies (see below). Charting a New Course for Communities in the Pacific In the Solomon Islands, a community-driven initiative to revive the water supply system destroyed by Tropical Cyclone Nina directly benefited 700 households. It is projected to scale up to four provinces and will reach about 79,000 people. In Timor-Leste, GFDRR supported efforts to identify risk and reduce vulnerability in 9 municipalities. The project, which included the development of community-based guidelines for disaster-risk management and features climate- and disaster-resilient road infrastructure, is expected to reach 7,000 beneficiaries and improve livelihoods throughout the country. Recommendations on Strengthening Social Resilience Core Properties of Resilience MODULARITY (networks) 9 MUNICIPALITIES 7,000 BENEFICIARIES Support bottom-up approaches that make use of social networks and support autonomous adaptation based on the lived experience of poor communities. We can use the reforestation program in our community as a living barrier against disaster because the trees have an impact on the force of the wind. The project helps women by providing an income and helps the community, which has been heavily damaged by disasters in the last few years. Josefina Sincal Community leader and recipient of grant from GFDRR Patzún, Chimaltenango, Guatemala RESPONSIVE, REGULATORY FEEDBACK DIVERSITY AND REDUNDANCY WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT Support communities to increase diversity and fallback options (e.g., diversification of livelihoods into activities less sensitive to climate-related or other forms of risk, such as through voluntary migration). Enhance social learning and sound governance as a form of regulatory feedback (e.g., building capacity in participatory approaches to scenario-based planning or measures to increase social accountability in the use of public finance for climate change response). Understand the gender dimensions of climate change and empower women as resilience champions. Martin-Breen, Patrick, and J. Marty Anderies. 011. Resilience: A Literature Review. Unpublished paper prepared for the Rockefeller Foundation (September). Arnold, Margaret; Mearns, Robin; Oshima, Kaori; Prasad, Vivek. 01. Climate and disaster resilience : the role for Community-Driven Development (CDD). Washington, DC ; World Bank Group.

ACTIVE ENGAGEMENTS AFGHANISTAN: Community-Driven Development The project will support activities led by communities including: local risk assessment; participatory risk planning; and training programs on community-based disaster risk management developed and rolled out across 1,000 communities. KYRGYZ REPUBLIC AFGHANISTAN PAKISTAN NEPAL BELIZE HAITI DOMINICAN REPUBLIC JAMAICA DOMINICA NIGER SAINT LUCIA GRENADA SENEGAL SIERRA LEONE CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC PHILIPPINES KIRIBATI JAMAICA: Social Protection The project will support Jamaica s objectives of greater preparedness of poor and vulnerable households by TOGO CONGO, DR KENYA SOMALIA BURUNDI SEYCHELLES INDONESIA MARSHALL ISLANDS improving the design of critical social protection channels and providing capacity building and training for staff and beneficiaries. BOLIVIA MALAWI VANUATU SOLOMON ISLANDS SAMOA TONGA FIJI This project is also complementing the efforts of existing projects worth $1 million, strengthening the links between MOZAMBIQUE Jamaica s social system and disaster risk management. SOMALIA: Gender-Based Violence Violence against women increases in the aftermath of disaster as existing strains are exacerbated. This pilot project in Somalia seeks to address this dynamic by: ICR Targets Over the next 5 years the ICR initiative aims to: Increasing the economic opportunities of women to improve livelihoods and build resilience; and Improving gender-based violence response services, such as hotlines and shelters. Reach 50 MILLION PEOPLE in communities around the world. INFLUENCE $5 BILLION in the World Bank s funding for communities and households ($1 billion per year). Support GFDRR's objective to have 0% OF ACTIVITIES gender-informed.

Indonesia Indonesia operates the largest community-driven program in the world, empowering residents at a local level to decide how development funds should be spent. The program is also a compelling example of how GFDRR works within larger investment projects to strengthen local-level resilience at scale. After years of success in rural villages, in 01 the Indonesian government focused on urban areas and slums for upgrading: with support from the World Bank, the government provided a loan of more than $150 million to be shared among 75,000 wards or villages in urban areas. At this point, GFDRR issued a grant of $3 million to help some of these communities consider disaster risk management in overall development projects. The grant was primarily used for technical assistance in identifying risk. Local community committees hired consultants who were trained on disaster risk management. At the same time, GFDRR also trained the consultants on communicating the results and mobilizing communities to discuss development issues. identify risks inf $3 MILLION GRANT train consultants luence spending on $150 MILLION INVESTMENT FROM WBG gather data Social Protection: Protecting Livelihoods and Improving Fallback Options Social protection provides an important way to directly reach millions of poor people facing increasing disaster risk. These programs harness existing state channels to provide financial aid such as cash transfers, subsidies and social insurance. This enables communities to better manage shocks and helps to avoid negative coping responses such as removing children from school or selling off assets. GFDRR is implementing innovative approaches, focusing on the links between social protection, disaster risk management, and climate change adaptation. In addition, these efforts support the call for a greater focus on the social dimensions of climate change and related vulnerability. For example, GFDRR is working with the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre to anticipate forecast-based Tracking the Community Impact of Disaster financing needs in Africa s Sahel region. This approach, the first pilot of its kind, will enable countries to roll out social protection mechanisms before hazard events strike, thus, significantly reducing the negative impact of extreme climate events. vunerable/ near poor subset of poor POPULATION SCALABILITY COMPONENT REGULAR SAFETY NET PROGRAM regular benefit BENEFIT AMOUNT additional grants Provided with this risk information, communities could SCALE MODEL TO SUPPORT 75,000 WARDS During the recovery period, GFDRR supported the close monitoring of the social impact of the devastation This graph reveals long-term effects of Cyclone Nargis, showing that, even five years after it then make decisions on which basic projects to prioritize through four rounds of studies. Such analytics support struck Myanmar and killed,000 people, for example drainage in a ward prone to flooding. GFDRR policy around the world and help shape future recovery efforts. villages in the Ayeyarwady Delta continued to face dire economic straits. The GFDRR grant created an original model, which was then scaled to a national level across 75,000 wards, including government distribution ECONOMIC CONDITIONS BY DEGREE OF AFFECTEDNESS number of villages level of affectedness High Mid Low of disaster risk training manuals and the incorporation of the techniques into mainstream approaches to slum upgrading GOOD STANDING FAIR STANDING POOR STANDING

CONTACT MARGARET ARNOLD Senior Social Development Specialist, World Bank marnold@worldbank.org GFDRR THEMATIC INITIATIVE: INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY RESILIENCE Empowering Communities For Resilience