Kevin Blanchard - DRR Dynamics

Research has consistently shown that disasters aren’t neutral within society and that different groups experience disasters in very different ways. In fact, when a disaster strikes, women and girls, older people, those with disabilities, ethnic minorities and LGBTQ groups will often experience a much higher fatality rate, sustain more/ severe injuries and be more adversely impacted on an economic basis. Research has also shown that in the aftermath of disasters, the way humanitarian aid is distributed will also depend on the types of groups receiving that aid, impacting which sections of the community recover fastest.

Working with governments, NGOs, academia and our own independent research, DRR Dynamics aims to address these imbalances by working towards changing the ‘status quo’ in disaster risk reduction and management techniques, to ensure a fully supportive, effective and equal process.

Upcoming (1)

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally primary image

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally

Thu, May 30 • 12:00 PM UTC

Free

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally primary image

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally

Thu, May 30 • 12:00 PM UTC

Free

Past (1)

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation primary image

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation

Thu, Sep 15 • 3:00 PM

Free

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation primary image

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation

Thu, Sep 15 • 3:00 PM

Free

Research has consistently shown that disasters aren’t neutral within society and that different groups experience disasters in very different ways. In fact, when a disaster strikes, women and girls, older people, those with disabilities, ethnic minorities and LGBTQ groups will often experience a much higher fatality rate, sustain more/ severe injuries and be more adversely impacted on an economic basis. Research has also shown that in the aftermath of disasters, the way humanitarian aid is distributed will also depend on the types of groups receiving that aid, impacting which sections of the community recover fastest.

Working with governments, NGOs, academia and our own independent research, DRR Dynamics aims to address these imbalances by working towards changing the ‘status quo’ in disaster risk reduction and management techniques, to ensure a fully supportive, effective and equal process.

Events

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally primary image

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally

Thu, May 30 • 12:00 PM UTC

Free

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally primary image

#DRRLive - Bridging Regional Barriers: Advancing Inclusive DRR Globally

Thu, May 30 • 12:00 PM UTC

Free

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation primary image

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation

Thu, Sep 15 • 3:00 PM

Free

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation primary image

The 2015 Landmark Agreements - Building For Gender-Inclusive Implementation

Thu, Sep 15 • 3:00 PM

Free