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This book presents a collection of double-blind peer reviewed papers under the scope of sustainable and resilient approaches for rebuilding displaced and host communities. Forced displacement is a major development challenge, not only a humanitarian concern. A surge in violent conflict, as well as increasing levels of disaster risk and environmental degradation driven by climate change, has forced people to leave or flee their homes both internally displaced as well as refugees. The rate of forced displacement befalling in different countries all over the world today is phenomenal, with an increasingly higher rate of the population being affected on daily basis than ever. These displacement situations are becoming increasingly protracted, many lasting over 5 years. Therefore, there is a need to develop more sustainable and resilient approaches to rebuild these displaced communities ensuring the long-term satisfaction of communities and enhancing the social cohesion between the displaced and host communities. Accordingly, chapters are arranged around five main themes of rebuilding communities after displacement.
Response management for displaced communities
The Built environment in resettlement planning
Governance of displacement
Socio-Economic interventions for sustainable resettlement
Introduces novel approaches for rebuilding displaced communities Focuses on sustainability and resilience which gives multi-perspective on displacement Dedicates chapters for Economic, governance, environment, and social cohesion aspects of displacement
Auteur
Mo Hamza is Professor of Risk Management and Societal Safety at Lund University, Sweden. In his career spanning 36 years so far, he has worked with international development organisations including: World Bank, ADB, UNDP, UNISDR, USAID, DfID, IFRC, IUCN, Swedish Red Cross, and the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB). His primary areas of professional expertise and research work are: Disaster risk and vulnerability reduction, post-disaster recovery, climate change impact and adaptation in fragile and failed states, and environmental displacement. Previously he was Chair of Social Vulnerability Studies at the United Nations University, Bonn, Germany; a Senior Research Fellow at the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), Sweden and an advisor to the MIT Climate CoLab. He has undertaken consultancy and research work in: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Botswana, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Uganda, UK, South Eastern Europe and the Balkan States. He is currently an advisor to the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) where he is responsible for their capacity development processes. Among various and more recent publications, Mo Hamza was the co-guest editor of a double special issue in Global Discourse Journal (2022) "Critical Exploration of Crisis: Politics, Precariousness and Potentialities", and the author of "Refugees' Integration in the Built Environment - The Sweden Case" in Sustainability Journal 2021. He was also the lead author and editor of the World Disasters Report (2015) "Focus on local actors, the key to humanitarian effectiveness".
Prof. Amaratunga a leading international expert in disaster resilience with an extensive academic career that has a strong commitment to encouraging colleagues and students to fulfil their full potential. Currently she is leading University of Huddersfield, UK's Global Disaster Resilience Centre. She is recognised for her career-long impact up until 2020, and is placed among the global top 2% of influential scientists, according to the report of "Composite Citation Metrics" by Elsevier BV Netherlands and Stanford University, USA, released in August 2021. She has project managed to successful completion a large number of international research projects (over £ 20 million) generating significant research outputs and outcomes. She provides expert advice on disaster resilience to national and local governments and international agencies including the UNDRR. To date, she has produced over 500 publications, refereed papers, and reports, and has made over 100 keynote speeches in around 40 countries. Among many leadership roles, she is the joint chief editor of the International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment. She is a member of the European Commission and UNDRR's European Science & Technology Advisory Group (ESTAG) representing the UK, a Steering Committee member of the UK Frontiers of Development programme, a Steering Committee member of the UK Alliance for Disaster Research, motivation of which is to bring together the UK's rich and diverse disaster research community to facilitate collaboration and partnership. She is a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), a Fellow of The Royal Geographical Society, and a Fellow and a Chartered Manager of the Chartered Management Institute, UK.
Richard Haigh is Professor of Disaster Resilience and Co-Director of the University of Huddersfield's Global Disaster Resilience Centre in the UK. His research interests include multi-hazard early warning, disaster risk governance and resilience in the built environment. He is the Editor-In-Chief of the International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment and Co-Chair of the International Conferences on Building Resilience, which started in 2008. He is an expert member of Work
Contenu
Rebuilding After Displacement: Identifying the Needs of Displaced Communities from the Perspective of the Built Environment.- Micro-narratives on People's Perception of Climate Change and its Impact on Their Livelihood and Migration: Voices from the Indigenous Aymara People in the Bolivian Andes.- From Zero to Hero? Changes in the Estonian Context for Refugees.- Challenges of Resilience Building Among Traditional Agricultural Communities Displaced by the Landslides.- Displaced Fishermen off the Coast: Impact of Multiple Hazards on Life Above the Water.- Drivers of Slow-onset Displacement in the Coastal Mid-Atlantic Region and Preferences for Receiving Locations.- Living with Landslide Risks: A Case of Resistance to Relocation Among Vulnerable Households Residing in the Kegalle District of Sri Lanka.- Internal Displacement in Nigeria: What are the Preventive Measures?.- An Architectural Analysis of Tsunami Re-settlement Villages of South of Sri Lanka.- Forced Displacement Following Reconstruction Approaches After 2005 Zarand Earthquake, Iran.- Disaster Induced Relocation of Vulnerable Households: Evidence from Planned Relocation in Sri Lanka.- How are Tamil Villages Reconstructed? Ethnography of Place-Making in Post-war Reconstruction in Sri Lanka.- Reproducing Vulnerabilities Through Forced Displacement: A Case Study of Flood Victims in Galle District, Sri Lanka.- Verticalised Slums, Governmentality and Pandemic Governance: A Critical Hermeneutical Analysis of Governance Practices in a Selected Urban High-Rise in Colombo, Sri Lanka.- Policy Recommendations for Built Environment Professional Bodies in Upgrading their Professional Competencies to Address Displacement Contexts.- Socio-economic Effects of War Against Terror Induced Displacement on Host Communities in District Kohat, Pakistan.- Social Capital and Community Organizing in Community-Based COVID-19 Management in Two Resettlement Sites in the Philippines.- A Guideline for Host Communities in Selecting Effective Livelihood's Interventions for Refugees in An Informal Refugee Resettlement: A Case Study of Chiang Mai Province, Thailand.- Changes in Social Capital After the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake - Results of an Awareness Survey in Taro district, Miyako City, Iwate Prefecture.- The Role of Social Capital as a Post-Relocation Coping Mechanism: A Cas…