National Disaster Resilience Month Quiz Bee Reference Guide PDF

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This document is a guide for participants in the Philippines' National Disaster Resilience Month Quiz Bee. It covers disaster risk reduction and management principles, preparedness strategies, and community-based resilience building.

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National Disaster Resilience Month Quiz Bee Reference Guide Empowering Communities Through Knowledge and Preparedness This comprehensive guide serves as an essential resource for participants of the National Dis...

National Disaster Resilience Month Quiz Bee Reference Guide Empowering Communities Through Knowledge and Preparedness This comprehensive guide serves as an essential resource for participants of the National Disaster Resilience Month Quiz Bee. It provides valuable information on disaster risk reduction and management (DRRM) principles, preparedness strategies, and community-based approaches to building resilience. Through this guide, we aim to foster a deeper understanding of DRRM concepts and empower communities to effectively mitigate, prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters. Join us in promoting a culture of safety and resilience as we work together towards a disaster-resilient future. Table of Contents CHAPTER 1: Basic Concept of Disaster and Disaster Risk............................................................................... 1 Philippines: A Country Prone to Natural Disasters......................................................................................... 1 Classification of Disasters:...................................................................................................................................... 1 Risk and Disaster Risk.............................................................................................................................................. 2 CHAPTER 2: Risk Factors Underlying Disasters................................................................................................... 3 Differentiating Risk Factors Underlying Disaster........................................................................................... 3 RISK FACTORS............................................................................................................................................................ 3 Factors which underlie disasters:......................................................................................................................... 3 CHAPTER 3: Disaster Risk Reduction and Disaster Risk Reduction and Management.......................... 5 Concept of DRR, Importance of DRR and Key Principles............................................................................. 5 CHAPTER 4: IMPLEMETING RULES AND REGULATIONS OF REPUBLIC ACT NO. 10121...................... 12 CHAPTER 1: Basic Concept of Disaster and Disaster Risk Philippines: A Country Prone to Natural Disasters The Philippines has experienced from an inexhaustible number of deadly earthquakes, volcano eruptions, and other natural disasters. This is due to its location along the Ring of Fire, a large Pacific Ocean region where many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur IT'S A DISASTER Disaster is "a sudden, calamitous occurrence that causes great harm, injury, destruction, and devastation to life and property". It disrupts the usual course of life, causing both physical and emotional distress such as an intense feeling of helplessness and hopelessness. A preceding definition of disaster stresses that two elements are affected - life (whether human or animal) and property. The effects vary - it maybe a minor damage (like broken windows and doors), major damage (like torn rooftops, collapsed walls), total destruction (like completely destroyed houses and structures rendering them useless and inhabitable) and the worst scenario, it can lead to death. (Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, ADPC, 2012) According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO, 2008), disaster is "a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses and impacts, which exceeds the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources". Any adverse episode or phenomenon can exploit a vulnerability in the affected population or community to create damage and this awareness will form the basis for an adequate intervention. Meanwhile, the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction defines disaster as a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses and impacts, which exceeds the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources. Disasters are often a result of the combination of: the exposure to a hazard; the conditions of vulnerability that are present; and insufficient capacity or measures to reduce or cope with the potential negative consequences. Its impacts may include loss of life, injury, disease and other negative effects on human physical, mental, and social wellbeing, together with damage to properties, destruction of assets, loss of services, social and economic disruptions, and environmental degradation. Classification of Disasters: Disasters can be divided into 2 large categories: A. Natural Disasters – a natural phenomenon is caused by natural forces, such as earthquakes, typhoon, volcanic eruptions, hurricanes, fires, tornados, and extreme temperatures. They can be classified as rapid onset disasters and those with progressive onset, such as droughts that lead to famine. These events, usually sudden, can have tremendous effects. B. Man-made (Human-induced) - Disasters caused by man are those in which major direct causes are identifiable intentional or non-intentional human actions. Subdivided into three categories: 1. Technological/industrial disasters - Unregulated industrialization and inadequate safety standards increase the risk for industrial disasters. EXAMPLE: leaks of hazardous materials; accidental explosions; bridge or road collapses, or vehicle collisions; Power cuts 1|Page 2. Terrorism/Violence - the threat of terrorism has also increased due to the spread of technologies involving nuclear, biological, and chemical agents used to develop weapons of mass destruction. EXAMPLE: bombs or explosions; release of chemical materials; release of biological agents; release of radioactive agents; multiple or massive shootings; mutinies 3. Complex humanitarian emergencies - the term complex emergency is usually used to describe the humanitarian emergency resulting from an international or civil war. In such situations, large numbers of people are displaced from their homes due to the lack of personal safety and the disruption of basic infrastructure including food distribution, water, electricity, and sanitation, or communities are left stranded and isolated in their own homes unable to access assistance. EXAMPLE: conflicts or wars and Genocide the deliberate killing of a large group of people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or nation. The damage caused by disaster cannot be measured. It also differs with the kind of geographical location, climate, earth’s specific characteristics, and level of vulnerability. These determining factors affect generally the psychological, socio – economic, political, and ethnical state of the affected area. Risk and Disaster Risk Risk has various connotations within different disciplines. In general, risk is defined as “the combination of the probability of an event and its negative consequences” (UNISDR, 2009). The term risk is thus multidisciplinary and is used in a variety of contexts. It is usually associated with the degree to which humans cannot cope (lack of capacity) with a situation (e.g. natural hazard). The term disaster risk refers to the potential (not actual and realized) disaster losses, in lives, health status, livelihoods, assets, and services which could occur in a community or society over some specified future time period. Disaster risk is the product of the possible damage caused by a hazard due to the vulnerability within a community. It should be noted that the effect of a hazard (of a particular magnitude) would affect communities differently (Von Kotze, 1999:35). It can also be determined by the presence of three variables: hazards (natural or anthropogenic); vulnerability to a hazard; and coping capacity linked to the reduction, mitigation, and resilience to the vulnerability of a community 2|Page CHAPTER 2: Risk Factors Underlying Disasters Differentiating Risk Factors Underlying Disaster Disaster can affect everyone. It does not discriminate between and among social classes, gender, creed, race, and nationality. But certain risk factors put those affected in a position where they will have graver or longer-lasting post-disaster stress reactions. These aggravating factors contribute to evident differences in the stress reactions of certain individuals with certain characteristics. RISK FACTORS Disaster risk as defined in the first module, has three important elements such as: 1. Exposure - the “elements at risk from a natural or man-made hazard event (Quebral, 2016). 2. Hazard-a potentially dangerous physical occurrence, phenomenon or human activity that may result in loss of life or injury, property damage, social and economic disruption, or environmental degradation. 3. Vulnerability - the condition determined by physical, social, economic and environmental factors or processes, which increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazard (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United nation, FAO 2008). Reduction of the level of vulnerability and exposure is possible by keeping people and property as distant as possible from hazards. We cannot avoid natural events from occurring, but we can concentrate on addressing the reduction of risk and exposure by determining the factors causing disasters. Risk Factors are processes or conditions, often development-related, that influence the level of disaster risk by increasing levels of exposure and vulnerability or reducing capacity. The following are also taken into consideration when risk factors underlying disaster are involved: Severity of exposure - which measures those who experience disaster firsthand which has the highest risk of developing future mental problems, followed by those in contact with the victims such as rescue workers and health care practitioners and the lowest risk are those most distant like those who have awareness of the disaster only through news. Gender and Family - the female gender suffers more adverse effects. This worsens when children are present at home. Marital relationships are placed under strain. Age - adults in the age range of 40-60 are more stressed after disasters but in general, children exhibit more stress after disasters than adults do. Economic status of country - evidence indicates that severe mental problems resulting from disasters are more prevalent in developing countries like the Philippines. Furthermore, it has been observed that natural disasters tend to have more adverse effects in developing countries than do mancaused disasters in developed countries. Factors which underlie disasters: 1. Climate Change - can increase disaster risk in a variety of ways – by altering the frequency and intensity of hazards events, affecting vulnerability to hazards, and changing exposure patterns. For most people, the expression “climate change” means the alteration of the world’s climate that we humans are causing such as burning of fossil fuels, deforestation and other practices that increase the carbon footprint and concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. This is in line with the official definition by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) that climate change is the change that can be attributed “directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods” 3|Page 2. Environmental Degradation - changes to the environment can influence the frequency and intensity of hazards, as well as our exposure and vulnerability to these hazards. For instance, deforestation of slopes often leads to an increase in landslide hazard and removal of mangroves can increase the damage caused by storm surges (UNISDR, 2009b). It is both a driver and consequence of disasters, reducing the capacity of the environment to meet social and ecological needs. Over consumption of natural resources results in environmental degradation, reducing the effectiveness of essential ecosystem services, such as the mitigation of floods and landslides. This leads to increased risk from disasters, and in turn, natural hazards can further degrade the environment. 3. Globalized Economic Development - It results in an increased polarization between the rich and poor on a global scale. Currently increasing the exposure of assets in hazard prone areas, globalized economic development provides an opportunity to build resilience if effectively managed. By participating in risk- sensitive development strategies such as investing in protective infrastructure, environmental management, and upgrading informal settlements, risk can be reduced. Dominance and increase of wealth in certain regions and cities are expected to have increased hazard exposure (Gencer, 2013). 4. Poverty and Inequality - Impoverished people are more likely to live in hazard-exposed areas and are less able to invest in risk-reducing measures. The lack of access to insurance and social protection means that people in poverty are often forced to use their already limited assets to buffer disaster losses, which drives them into further poverty. Poverty is therefore both a cause and consequence of disaster risk (Wisner et al., 2004), particularly extensive risk, with drought being the hazard most closely associated with poverty (Shepard et al., 2013). The impact of disasters on the poor can, in addition to loss of life, injury and damage, cause a total loss of livelihoods, displacement, poor health, food insecurity, among other consequences. Vulnerability is not simply about poverty, but extensive research over the past 30 years has revealed that it is generally the poor who tend to suffer worst from disasters (DFID, 2004; Twigg, 2004; Wisner et al., 2004; UNISDR, 2009b). 5. Poorly planned and Managed Urban Development - A new wave of urbanization is unfolding in hazard-exposed countries and with it, new opportunities for resilient investment emerge. People, poverty, and disaster risk are increasingly concentrated in cities. The growing rate of urbanization and the increase in population density (in cities) can lead to creation of risk, especially when urbanization is rapid, poorly planned and occurring in a context of widespread poverty. Growing concentrations of people and economic activities in many cities are seen to overlap with areas of high-risk exposure. 6. Weak Governance - weak governance zones are investment environments in which public sector actors are unable or unwilling to assume their roles and responsibilities in protecting rights, providing basic services and public services. Disaster risk is disproportionately concentrated in lower-income countries with weak governance (UNISDR, 2015a). Disaster risk governance refers to the specific arrangements that societies put in place to manage their disaster risk (UNISDR, 2011a; UNDP, 2013a) within a broader context of risk governance (Renn, 2008 in UNISDR, 2015a). This reflects how risk is valued against a backdrop of broader social and economic concerns (Holley et al., 2011). Certain factors are related to a survivor’s background and recovery is hampered if survivors: were not functioning well before the disaster; have no experience dealing with disasters; must deal with other stressors after the disaster; have low self-esteem; feel uncared for by others; think they exercise little control over what happens to them; and unable to manage stress. More factors contributory to worse outcomes: death of someone close; injury to self or family member; life threat; panic, horror, or similar feelings; separation from family; massive loss of property; and displacement 4|Page CHAPTER 3: Disaster Risk Reduction and Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Concept of DRR, Importance of DRR and Key Principles 5|Page 6|Page 7|Page 8|Page 9|Page 10 | P a g e 11 | P a g e CHAPTER 4: IMPLEMETING RULES AND REGULATIONS OF REPUBLIC ACT NO. 10121 12 | P a g e 13 | P a g e 14 | P a g e 15 | P a g e 16 | P a g e 17 | P a g e 18 | P a g e 19 | P a g e 20 | P a g e 21 | P a g e 22 | P a g e 23 | P a g e 24 | P a g e 25 | P a g e 26 | P a g e 27 | P a g e 28 | P a g e 29 | P a g e 30 | P a g e 31 | P a g e 32 | P a g e 33 | P a g e 34 | P a g e 35 | P a g e 36 | P a g e 37 | P a g e 38 | P a g e

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