Inserting rights and justice into urban resilience: a focus on everyday risk in cities in the South

Community-based organisation and action can contribute greatly to disaster risk reduction, and to building resilience to the impacts of climate change

Abstract

Community-based organisation and action can contribute greatly to disaster risk reduction, and interlinked to this, to building resilience to the impacts of climate change. However, as the case study cities from the Urban Africa: Risk Knowledge (Urban ARK) programme show, community action needs to be oriented towards working with local government, and not become a substitute for local government inaction. This is the case even when local government lacks the capacity to act, since it can still encourage and legitimate (or constrain and repress) community-based action. The city studies also show how attention to the full spectrum of risk highlights the synergies between risk reduction from everyday small and large disasters. In addition, community-led data collection on conditions in informal settlements can inform and strengthen community-local government partnerships for risk reduction.

This is an output from the Urban Africa: Risk Knowledge (Urban ARK) programme

Citation

Ziervogel, G., Pelling, M., Cartwright, A., Chu, E., Deshpande, T., Harris, L., Hyams, K., Kaunda, J., Klaus, B., Michael, K., Pasquini, L., Pharoah, R., Rodina, L., Scott, D., Zweig, P. (2018) ‘Inserting rights and justice into urban resilience: a focus on everyday risk in cities in the South’. Urban Ark Briefing No 9. April 2018

Inserting rights and justice into urban resilience: a focus on everyday risk in cities in the South

Published 1 April 2018