Toolkit for National Platforms for Disaster Risk Reduction in Africa

Author(s)
Westgate, D.
Publication language
English
Pages
57pp
Date published
01 Sep 2010
Type
Tools, guidelines and methodologies
Keywords
Disaster risk reduction, Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction
Organisations
United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR)

 

Why is this toolkit necessary?
The need to protect development, to strengthen resilience in Africa is obviously an important goal. The reducing
of disaster risk is one important way of achieving this goal and the encouragement of governments by UNISDR
and others to use national platforms or coordinating mechanisms for DRR to assist the process is critical to
its success. UNISDR has produced guidelines but these now need to be enhanced through the elaboration of
practical steps necessary to establish, maintain and sustain the platforms. The toolkit is for this purpose –
outlining actions, examples and resources available for those with the responsibility for animating their country’s
national platform for DRR or participating in it. The toolkit will also hopefully answer key questions about how
the national platform will function, who will attend, what its agenda will be and whether it will have authority.
Who is the toolkit for?
Having a copy of this toolkit in your hands is not a guarantee of success. A toolkit requires someone to use
the tools and the advice that are available. Also, not every tool is suitable for a particular situation – some tools will be useful in some circumstances, others will be useful in others. There is selection from which to
choose and the choice will need to be made depending on the individual context.
Thus, the toolkit is for those who have the responsibility to set up, maintain and sustain a national platform
for DRR. It is also for those who participate in national platforms and who organise and administer them.
This is potentially a wide range of stakeholders. Obviously it includes government officials but it also includes
members of civil society and the NGO community, as well as representatives of international organisations
and donors and the private sector. Most importantly, perhaps, it includes the members of the communities
that are at risk. This is a very wide constituency, consistent with the all-embracing character of DRR.