住房自我修复:瓦努阿图的经验

Iftekhar Ahmed, C. Parrack
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文借鉴了一个研究项目,该项目探讨了瓦努阿图社区从重大灾害中恢复的生活现实,以了解人道主义组织对住房干预的影响。它侧重于“庇护所自我修复”,这是最近灾难发生后各组织采用的一种方法。自我恢复的全球概述突出了这种方法支持恢复途径的潜力,并指出了对当地情况的依赖。该综述表明,需要更多的证据来证明自我恢复计划的影响。在瓦努阿图,这项研究是在tanna、Maewo和pentecost三个受不同灾害影响的岛屿上进行的,尤其是飓风。它审查了三个主要问题:(a)对自我恢复的理解和解释;(b)方法如何随时间演变;(c)社区在支持自我恢复以减少未来灾害风险方面正在做些什么。该领域的主要发现表明,飓风等灾害造成的破坏可能导致天然建筑材料严重短缺,从而阻碍了自我恢复过程。另一个重要的问题是传统建筑材料与现代建筑材料的对比,许多人渴望现代房屋。然而,建造不良的现代房屋在灾害中构成了风险,有一些用传统材料建造的庇护所提供了安全。根据实地调查,制定了一套建议,以便人道主义机构与社区和其他利益攸关方合作,更有效地进行住房自我修复。这些建议重视环境因素、社区咨询和参与,以及解决天然建筑材料的供应问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Shelter Self-Recovery: The Experience of Vanuatu
This paper draws from a research project that explored the lived reality of communities in Vanuatu recovering from major disasters to understand the impacts of shelter interventions by humanitarian organizations. It focuses on “shelter self-recovery”, anapproach followed by organizations after recent disasters. A global overview of self-recovery highlights the potential of this approach to support recovery pathways and indicates the reliance on local context. The overview shows the need for more evidence on the impact of self-recovery programs. In Vanuatu, the study was undertaken in three island sites—Tanna, Maewo and Pentecost—affected by different disasters, particularly cyclones. It examined three main issues: (a) understanding and interpretation of self-recovery; (b) how the approach has evolved over time; and (c) what is being done by communities to support self-recovery to reduce future disaster risk. Key findings from the field indicated that devastation by disasters such as cyclones can cause a serious scarcity of natural building materials, which impedes the self-recovery process. The other significant issue is that of traditional versus modern building materials, where many people aspire for modern houses. However, poorly constructed modern houses pose a risk in disasters, and there are examples of shelters made of traditional materials that provide safety. Drawing from the field investigations, a set of recommendations were developed for more effective shelter self-recovery by humanitarian agencies in partnership with communities and other stakeholders. These recommendations place importance on contextual factors, community consultation and engagement, and addressing the supply of natural building materials.
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