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The Economics of Early Response and Disaster Resilience: Lessons from Kenya and Ethiopia
Resource ID
b740a6ac-9f5b-11e5-83b1-040146164b01
Title
The Economics of Early Response and Disaster Resilience: Lessons from Kenya and Ethiopia
Date
Sept. 29, 2012, 3:33 p.m., Publication
Abstract
The impacts of natural disasters and complex emergencies have been increasing over recent decades, putting the humanitarian system under considerable pressure. In 2010 natural disasters affected more than 217 million people, killed more than 297,000 people and caused $123.9 billion in economic damages. The costs of humanitarian crises are equally growing – not only do disasters and complex emergencies result in significant economic losses, but they also require mobilization of large amounts of humanitarian aid from the international community. Following the UN General Assembly in September 2011, the UK has agreed to develop a proposal on how resilience can be taken forward within the international system. Evidence on the cost-effectiveness of disaster resilience will be crucial in progressing this agenda.
Edition
--
Responsible
andy
Point of Contact
Fraser
sfraser@worldbank.org
Purpose
For use in the ThinkHazard! (THOR) project
Maintenance Frequency
None
Type
not filled
Restrictions
None
License
None
Language
eng
Temporal Extent
Start
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End
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Supplemental Information
drought, river_flood, tsunami, strong_wind, volcanic_ash, landslide
Data Quality
--
Extent
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  • x1:
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Spatial Reference System Identifier
EPSG:4326
Keywords
(9753, 77, 373, 48, 77, 'Resilience', 'resilience'), (9750, 106, 373, 48, 106, 'Ethiopia', 'ethiopia'), (9751, 107, 373, 48, 107, 'Economics', 'economics'), (9752, 108, 373, 48, 108, 'DFID', 'dfid'), (9754, 109, 373, 48, 109, 'Kenya', 'kenya')
Category
Economy
Regions
Ethiopia , Kenya