非营利部门组织在降低风险实践、决策参与、社区和社会贡献以及恢复方面的行动

Grace L. Chikoto-Schultz, Yu Xiao, P. Manson, M. Amiri
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引用次数: 3

摘要

非营利组织在许多方面对社会做出了重大贡献。除了为我们社区中代表性不足、边缘化和弱势群体提供服务外,他们还发挥重要的宣传、表达能力和领导力发展、社区建设和民主化以及创新导向的作用。因此,该部门被视为“关键的公民基础设施”、公民能力或社会安全网。因此,通过协作参与灾害或应急管理,非营利组织可以在帮助社区增强抗灾能力方面发挥更大的作用。灾害管理可以理解为一个四阶段循环,包括减轻、准备、响应和恢复功能。过去的灾难表明,非营利组织以不同的方式参与了这个循环。少数类型的非营利组织明确地将灾害管理的一个或多个阶段作为其使命的一部分。这些组织包括传统的救灾组织、致力于备灾的组织或负责支持减少或减轻风险工作的组织。另一类组织以非营利组织为代表,它们在灾难发生时改变使命,以满足未满足的需求。这些非营利组织将现有的资源或技能从灾前使用转移到新的救灾功能上。另一种响应或支持灾害管理的非营利组织是应急组织。这些紧急的非营利组织或协会是在一个事件中形成的,以响应特定的需求。它们可以熬过灾难恢复期,成为新的永久性组织。重要的是要记住,非营利组织和更广泛地说,公民社会代表了一个独立于家庭、国家和市场之外的人类自愿组织和活动的独特领域。在某些情况下,这些组织嵌入到社区中,这一地位赋予了它们在当地的存在、知识和信任。因此,它们完全有能力发挥重要的宣传作用,提高代表性不足的社区的需求,并推动有助于保护这些社区的灾害管理政策。此外,它们的自愿性质——以及它们所赋予的公共利益——也使它们能够从各种个人和实体那里吸引急需的资源,以增强或补充政府往往有限的能力。总的来说,公民社会是一个很好的领域,可以在传统的国家应对措施之外,执行全面的应急管理职能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Non-Profit Sector Organizational Actions on Risk Reduction Practices, Policymaking Participation, Community and Social Contributions, and Recovery
Non-Profit organizations make significant contributions to society in a number of ways. In addition to providing services to underrepresented, marginalized, and vulnerable populations in our communities, they also play important advocacy, expressive and leadership development, community building and democratization, and innovation-oriented roles. The sector is thus regarded as “critical civic infrastructure,” civic capacity, or a social safety net. As such, through collaborative engagement in disaster or emergency management, non-profits can be even more instrumental in helping communities become disaster resilient. Disaster management can be understood as a four-stage cycle that includes mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery functions. Past disasters demonstrate that non-profits engage with this cycle in diverse ways. A few types of non-profit organizations explicitly include, as part of their mission, one or more of these stages of disaster management. These include traditional disaster relief organizations, organizations dedicated to preparedness, or those responsible for supporting risk reduction or mitigation efforts. Another set of organizations is typified by non-profits that shift their mission during times of disaster to fill unmet needs. These non-profits shift existing resources or skills from their pre-disaster use to new disaster relief functions. The other type of non-profit to respond or support disaster management is the emergent organization. These emergent non-profits or associations are formed during an event to respond to specific needs. They can endure past the disaster recovery period and become new permanent organizations. It is important to remember that non-profits and more broadly, civil society—represent a unique sphere of voluntary human organization and activity separate from the family, the state, and the market. In some cases, these organizations are embedded in communities, a position that grants them local presence, knowledge, and trust. As such, they are well positioned to play important advocacy roles that can elevate the needs of underrepresented communities, as well as instigate disaster management policies that can serve to protect these communities. Furthermore, their voluntary nature—and the public benefit they confer—also position them to attract much-needed resources from various individuals and entities in order to augment or supplement governments’ often limited capacity. In all, civil society in general, is a sphere well positioned to execute the full spectrum of emergency management functions alongside traditional state responses.
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