DRRR Week 2.
DRRR Week 2.
DRRR Week 2.
2nd SEMESTER
Teacher: DELFIN DENZO
Contact No. 09100842855 – Fb Page: Del Dela Cruz Denzo
LESSON 2
DIFFERENTIATING RISK FACTORS
UNDERLYING DISASTER
RISK FACTORS
Disaster risk as defined in the first module, has three important elements such as:
1. Exposure - the “elements at risk from a natural or man-made hazard event (Quebral, 2016).
⚫ Gender and Family - the female gender suffers more adverse effects. This worsens when children are
present at home. Marital relationships are placed under strain.
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⚫ Age - adults in the age range of 40-60 are more stressed after disasters but in general, children exhibit more
stress after disasters than adults do.
Magbool, Irfan, Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, ADPC, 31 December 2012,
https://www.adpc.net/igo/contents/adpcpage.asp?pid=1266&dep=RIG
⚫ Economic status of country - evidence indicates that severe mental problems resulting from disasters are
more prevalent in developing countries like the Philippines. Furthermore, it has been observed that natural
disasters tend to have more adverse effects in developing countries than do mancaused disasters in developed
countries.
Magbool, Irfan, Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, ADPC, 31 December 2012,
https://www.adpc.net/igo/contents/adpcpage.asp?pid=1266&dep=RIG
2. Environmental Degradation - changes to the environment can influence the frequency and intensity of
hazards, as well as our exposure and vulnerability to these hazards. For instance, deforestation of slopes often leads to
an increase in landslide hazard and removal of mangroves can increase the damage caused by storm surges (UNISDR,
2009b). It is both a driver and consequence of disasters, reducing the capacity of the environment to meet social and
ecological needs. Over consumption of natural resources results in environmental degradation, reducing the
effectiveness of essential ecosystem services, such as the mitigation of floods and landslides. This leads to increased
risk from disasters, and in turn, natural hazards can further degrade the environment.
3. Globalized Economic Development - It results in an increased polarization between the rich and poor on a
global scale. Currently increasing the exposure of assets in hazard prone areas, globalized economic development
provides an opportunity to build resilience if effectively managed. By participating in risksensitive development
strategies such as investing in protective infrastructure, environmental management, and upgrading informal
settlements, risk can be reduced. Dominance and increase of wealth in certain regions and cities are expected to have
increased hazard exposure (Gencer, 2013).
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Prevention Web. Editor, “Globalized Economic Development”, Prevention Web. The Knowledge Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, 12
November 2015 https://www.preventionweb.net/risk/globalized-economic-development
4. Poverty and Inequality - Impoverished people are more likely to live in hazardexposed areas and are less
able to invest in risk-reducing measures. The lack of access to insurance and social protection means that people in
poverty are often forced to use their already limited assets to buffer disaster losses, which drives them into further
poverty. Poverty is therefore both a cause and consequence of disaster risk (Wisner et al., 2004), particularly extensive
risk, with drought being the hazard most closely associated with poverty (Shepard et al., 2013). The impact of
disasters on the poor can, in addition to loss of life, injury and damage, cause a total loss of livelihoods, displacement,
poor health, food insecurity, among other consequences. Vulnerability is not simply about poverty, but extensive
research over the past 30 years has revealed that it is generally the poor who tend to suffer worst from disasters
(DFID, 2004; Twigg, 2004; Wisner et al., 2004; UNISDR, 2009b).
Prevention Web. Editor, “Poverty and inequality”, Prevention Web.
The Knowledge Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, 12 November
2015 https://www.preventionweb.net/risk/poverty-inequality
5. Poorly planned and Managed Urban Development - A new wave of urbanization is unfolding in hazard-
exposed countries and with it, new opportunities for resilient investment emerge. People, poverty, and disaster risk are
increasingly concentrated in cities. The growing rate of urbanization and the increase in population density (in cities)
can lead to creation of risk, especially when urbanization is rapid, poorly planned and occurring in a context of
widespread poverty. Growing concentrations of people and economic activities in many cities are seen to overlap with
areas of high-risk exposure.
Prevention Web editor, “Poorly planned and managed urban development “, Prevention Web. The
Knowledge Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, 12 November 2015
https://www.preventionweb.net/risk/poorly-planned-managed-urban-development
6. Weak Governance - weak governance zones are investment environments in which public sector actors are
unable or unwilling to assume their roles and responsibilities in protecting rights, providing basic services and public
services. Disaster risk is disproportionately concentrated in lower-income countries with weak governance (UNISDR,
2015a). Disaster risk governance refers to the specific arrangements that societies put in place to manage their disaster
risk (UNISDR, 2011a; UNDP, 2013a) within a broader context of risk governance (Renn, 2008 in UNISDR, 2015a).
This reflects how risk is valued against a backdrop of broader social and economic concerns (Holley et al., 2011).
Certain factors are related to a survivor’s background and recovery is hampered if survivors: were not
functioning well before the disaster; have no experience dealing with disasters; must deal with other stressors after the
disaster; have low self-esteem; feel uncared for by others; think they exercise little control over what happens to them;
and unable to manage stress.
More factors contributory to worse outcomes: death of someone close; injury to self or family member; life
threat; panic, horror, or similar feelings; separation from family; massive loss of property; and displacement.
Activity 1 Am I Ready?
Direction: Suppose you are invited by the SK Chairman in your barangay as a resource speaker to your fellow age
group during an Environmental Awareness Activity and you were asked to give emphasis on the risk factors
underlying disasters so that young people will be equipped with knowledge on how to mitigate the effects of a
disaster. Have a concept in mind of how you are going to deliver the information. Write down what you want to
deliver to the audience and make a video speech send it to our group chat. The given rubrics below will be used for
scoring.
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Rubrics for creating a speech.
4 3 2 1
The speech is on
The speech The speech is on The speech is
topic but the
Content adheres to the topic and the neither on topic nor
substance is
theme/topic. substance is fair. has substance.
satisfactory.
Activity 1: Bring it on
Square the letter of the best answer. And write the capital letter of your choice in the
blanks provided. Use Blue ballpen.
1. Which of the following is the process or condition, often development-related, that influence the level of
disaster risk by increasing levels of exposure and vulnerability or reducing capacity?
a. risk factor
b. disaster risk
c. natural hazard __________
d. man-made hazard
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d. reduction of vulnerability and exposure
4. Which of the following risk factors BEST describes the cause of COVID-19 pandemic?
a. climate change
b. weak governance
c. globalized economic development __________
d. poorly- planned and managed urban development
5. It refers to the changes that can be attributed “directly or indirectly to human activity altering the composition
of the global atmosphere and additionally to the natural climate variability observed over comparable periods
of time”?
a. deforestation
b. climate change
c. global warming __________
d. carbon footprint
8. Unwillingness to assume their roles and responsibilities in governing disaster risk unit, falls under which of the
following risk factors?
a. climate change
b. weak governance
c. poverty and inequality __________
d. environmental degradation
9. Which among the groups suffer more adverse effects when an earthquake causing disaster occurs?
a. men and women
b. children and women
c. old persons and women __________
d. old persons and children
10.The occurrence of landslides in the Philippines is increasing. This kind of disaster will fall under which of the
following risks?
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a. poverty and inequality
b. climate change and weak governance
c. climate change and environmental degradation __________
d. climate change and globalized economic development
11.The ages below are average years ranges affected by specific situations happening as a disaster occurs. Which
of the following age ranges are “Most Stressed-Out” after a disaster according to Asian Disaster Preparedness
Center (ADPC)?
a. 16-20
b. 20-30
c. 30-40 __________
d. 40-60
12.Which of the following risk factors is the result in an increased polarization between the rich and poor on a
global scale?
a. climate change
b. poverty and inequality
c. environmental degradation __________
d. globalized economic development
13.Which of the following is NOT a contributor to the worst outcomes when a disaster happened?
a. displacement
b. can handle stress
c. death of someone close __________
d. massive loss of property
14.Who among the following groups of people are more likely to live in hazard-exposed areas and are less able to
invest in risk-reducing measures based on most studies in Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC)? a.
middle class
a. senior citizens
b. young professionals __________
c. impoverished people
15.It is a risk factor that is both a driver and a consequence of disasters, reducing the capacity of the environment
to meet social and ecological needs, what is it?
a. climate change
b. weak governance
c. poverty and inequality __________
d. environmental degradation