Disaster prevention, disaster preparedness and local community resilience within the context of disaster risk management in Cameroon

Cameroon was one of the 57 countries that participated in the Global Network of Civil Society Organizations for Disaster Reduction (GNDR) Views from the Frontline (VFL) 2013 project on everyday disasters, community resilience and disaster preparedness. Working with 6 other civil society organization...

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Veröffentlicht in:Natural hazards (Dordrecht) 2017-03, Vol.86 (1), p.57-88
Hauptverfasser: Aka, Festus Tongwa, Buh, Gaston Wung, Fantong, Wilson Yatoh, Issa, Zouh, Isabella Tem, Djomou, Serges Laurent Bopda, Ghogomu, Richard Tanwi, Gibson, Terry, Marmol del, Mary-Ann, Sigha, Luc Nkamdjou, Ohba, Takeshi, Kusakabe, Minoru, Yoshida, Yutaka, Tanyileke, Gregory, Nnange, Joseph Metuk, Hell, Joseph Victor
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 57
container_title Natural hazards (Dordrecht)
container_volume 86
creator Aka, Festus Tongwa
Buh, Gaston Wung
Fantong, Wilson Yatoh
Issa
Zouh, Isabella Tem
Djomou, Serges Laurent Bopda
Ghogomu, Richard Tanwi
Gibson, Terry
Marmol del, Mary-Ann
Sigha, Luc Nkamdjou
Ohba, Takeshi
Kusakabe, Minoru
Yoshida, Yutaka
Tanyileke, Gregory
Nnange, Joseph Metuk
Hell, Joseph Victor
description Cameroon was one of the 57 countries that participated in the Global Network of Civil Society Organizations for Disaster Reduction (GNDR) Views from the Frontline (VFL) 2013 project on everyday disasters, community resilience and disaster preparedness. Working with 6 other civil society organizations, Geotechnology, Environmental Assessment and Disaster Risk Reduction administered 400 questionnaires to frontliners in 7 administrative regions of the country on 14 disaster indicators that assessed the underlying causes of disasters and the level of preparedness and resilience of the communities. Scores from the 89% of informants who responded show that Cameroon occupied the 43rd position globally, was 15th out of the 23 African countries, and was 7th out of the 9 West African countries surveyed. Cameroon average scores for all 14 indicators were lower (poorer) than the West African average, suggesting that a lot more effort is needed in managing disaster risks in the country, i.e., reducing vulnerabilities and increasing preparedness and resilience. At the national level, the Center and Adamaoua Regions recorded the lowest scores of the survey. Above-average scores recorded for some indicators in the Southwest, Northwest and Far North Regions are interpreted to be due to disaster prevention activities like monitoring via early warning systems, resilience building and outreach exercises carried out for disasters like landslides, floods, gas explosions from lakes, and volcanic eruptions, in these areas. Cameroon presently has many laws relating to disaster risk management matters, but an analysis of how the laws are applied shows that the expected results have not been attained, mainly because of over-centralization and a reactive, rather than a proactive approach to disaster risk management. Given her current disaster risk profile, Cameroon has to increase research, better manage, and make disaster risks a central tenet in her development project decision-making, if the goal earmarked in her development vision to become a newly industrialized country by 2035 has to be realized. We propose the creation of an autonomous statutory National Disaster Risk Management Agency which will have a local community-driven bottom-top approach to disaster risk management, and disseminate appropriately tailored disaster risk information to promote a proactive community-based resilience and disaster prevention framework. This will fulfill the post-2015 Sendai framework priorit
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Above-average scores recorded for some indicators in the Southwest, Northwest and Far North Regions are interpreted to be due to disaster prevention activities like monitoring via early warning systems, resilience building and outreach exercises carried out for disasters like landslides, floods, gas explosions from lakes, and volcanic eruptions, in these areas. Cameroon presently has many laws relating to disaster risk management matters, but an analysis of how the laws are applied shows that the expected results have not been attained, mainly because of over-centralization and a reactive, rather than a proactive approach to disaster risk management. Given her current disaster risk profile, Cameroon has to increase research, better manage, and make disaster risks a central tenet in her development project decision-making, if the goal earmarked in her development vision to become a newly industrialized country by 2035 has to be realized. 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Above-average scores recorded for some indicators in the Southwest, Northwest and Far North Regions are interpreted to be due to disaster prevention activities like monitoring via early warning systems, resilience building and outreach exercises carried out for disasters like landslides, floods, gas explosions from lakes, and volcanic eruptions, in these areas. Cameroon presently has many laws relating to disaster risk management matters, but an analysis of how the laws are applied shows that the expected results have not been attained, mainly because of over-centralization and a reactive, rather than a proactive approach to disaster risk management. Given her current disaster risk profile, Cameroon has to increase research, better manage, and make disaster risks a central tenet in her development project decision-making, if the goal earmarked in her development vision to become a newly industrialized country by 2035 has to be realized. 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Buh, Gaston Wung ; Fantong, Wilson Yatoh ; Issa ; Zouh, Isabella Tem ; Djomou, Serges Laurent Bopda ; Ghogomu, Richard Tanwi ; Gibson, Terry ; Marmol del, Mary-Ann ; Sigha, Luc Nkamdjou ; Ohba, Takeshi ; Kusakabe, Minoru ; Yoshida, Yutaka ; Tanyileke, Gregory ; Nnange, Joseph Metuk ; Hell, Joseph Victor</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c382t-cc94eaaa1f2afa3fe9a5895f98b0a5434d9c6cc32cf4bd2f9e1bce9b0192d38c3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2017</creationdate><topic>Cameroons</topic><topic>Civil Engineering</topic><topic>Civil society</topic><topic>Community</topic><topic>Development projects</topic><topic>Disaster management</topic><topic>Disaster risk</topic><topic>Disasters</topic><topic>Earth and Environmental Science</topic><topic>Earth Sciences</topic><topic>Emergency communications systems</topic><topic>Emergency preparedness</topic><topic>Environmental assessment</topic><topic>Environmental Management</topic><topic>Environmental risk</topic><topic>Explosions</topic><topic>Geophysics/Geodesy</topic><topic>Geotechnical Engineering &amp; 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Working with 6 other civil society organizations, Geotechnology, Environmental Assessment and Disaster Risk Reduction administered 400 questionnaires to frontliners in 7 administrative regions of the country on 14 disaster indicators that assessed the underlying causes of disasters and the level of preparedness and resilience of the communities. Scores from the 89% of informants who responded show that Cameroon occupied the 43rd position globally, was 15th out of the 23 African countries, and was 7th out of the 9 West African countries surveyed. Cameroon average scores for all 14 indicators were lower (poorer) than the West African average, suggesting that a lot more effort is needed in managing disaster risks in the country, i.e., reducing vulnerabilities and increasing preparedness and resilience. At the national level, the Center and Adamaoua Regions recorded the lowest scores of the survey. Above-average scores recorded for some indicators in the Southwest, Northwest and Far North Regions are interpreted to be due to disaster prevention activities like monitoring via early warning systems, resilience building and outreach exercises carried out for disasters like landslides, floods, gas explosions from lakes, and volcanic eruptions, in these areas. Cameroon presently has many laws relating to disaster risk management matters, but an analysis of how the laws are applied shows that the expected results have not been attained, mainly because of over-centralization and a reactive, rather than a proactive approach to disaster risk management. Given her current disaster risk profile, Cameroon has to increase research, better manage, and make disaster risks a central tenet in her development project decision-making, if the goal earmarked in her development vision to become a newly industrialized country by 2035 has to be realized. We propose the creation of an autonomous statutory National Disaster Risk Management Agency which will have a local community-driven bottom-top approach to disaster risk management, and disseminate appropriately tailored disaster risk information to promote a proactive community-based resilience and disaster prevention framework. This will fulfill the post-2015 Sendai framework priority of action No. 2 (strengthening disaster risk governance to manage disaster risk) and appropriately prepare Cameroon to face the challenges of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).</abstract><cop>Dordrecht</cop><pub>Springer Netherlands</pub><doi>10.1007/s11069-016-2674-5</doi><tpages>32</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9782-1662</orcidid></addata></record>
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ispartof Natural hazards (Dordrecht), 2017-03, Vol.86 (1), p.57-88
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language eng
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subjects Cameroons
Civil Engineering
Civil society
Community
Development projects
Disaster management
Disaster risk
Disasters
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Emergency communications systems
Emergency preparedness
Environmental assessment
Environmental Management
Environmental risk
Explosions
Geophysics/Geodesy
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences
Geotechnology
Hydrogeology
Indicators
Landslides
Natural Hazards
Original Paper
Prevention
Reduction
Resilience
Risk
Risk management
Risk reduction
Soil sciences
Sustainable development
Volcanic eruptions
Warning systems
title Disaster prevention, disaster preparedness and local community resilience within the context of disaster risk management in Cameroon
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