2005
UN Sasakawa Award
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Interviews
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Omar Dario Cardona
2004 Winner Of The United Nations Sasakawa Award For Disaster Reduction
Omar Dario Cardona is the 2004 winner of the Sasakawa Award.
A Colombian earthquake engineer, he is recognized internationally
for his comprehensive approaches to vulnerability and risk
management. He made a remarkable contribution in the field
of seismic risk reduction in introducing the concept of structural
seismic vulnerability.
You have just been nominated for the Sasakawa Award? What does
this mean for you?
When I found out that several people and institutions wished
to propose my name for this important distinction on the part
the United Nations, I immediately thought about others who, from
my point of view, equally deserved to be rewarded for their remarkable
contributions to disaster risk management around the world. I
was very honored to realize that somebody thought I had sufficient
merit to be a candidate for such an important award, because
as far as I am concerned this award is the greatest recognition
that a person can receive for their efforts in achieving a safer
world when faced by hazardous events. It is very important that
this award exists, not only for those who receive it, but mainly
because it enhances the subject of risk management and disaster
prevention.
You have been working for a long time now on disaster risk reduction
and your contribution to disaster prevention is huge and diverse
on vulnerability, risk and institutional development. You have
dedicated almost all your life to the subject: what has motivated
your work?
Colombia is a country of enormous contrasts, natural beauty and
amazing cultural expressions that interact with a situation of
permanent social crisis and disasters of all types. Since I was
a boy in Manizales, where I was born, I realized the attitudes
people had when facing up to phenomena like earthquakes, fires,
landslides and volcanic eruptions. This particular environment
and culture were the reason why I, a young civil engineer, first
committed myself to improving our technical-scientific knowledge
and later to the integrated study of the socioeconomic and institutional
foundations of disaster risk management.
Do you think that people and governments are more aware of risk
reduction and do you feel that the subject is gaining momentum?
There are advances in many parts of the world, there is greater
consciousness with regard to the problem and today it is possible
to identify and describe many good practices that can help stimulate
the mainstreaming of disaster risk management in the economic
and social development of our communities. Nevertheless, the
road we have to walk is very long and we have only just begun
our trip. There are places where progress is very limited or
none at all, and the problems grows considerably faster than
the solutions.
You are an earthquake engineer and did a lot of work establishing
a first seismic code of practices to build houses, including
social housing, more resistant with simple techniques of construction.
Could you tell us more about your project and its impact in Latin
America? What are the main obstacles you encountered to implement
those practices?
I have always been convinced that the most effective indication
of seismic risk mitigation is the application of seismic resistant
requirements in the construction of new and existing buildings
that have special value for society, like hospitals and schools.
Nevertheless, building codes are often not respected or enforced
because they are difficult to understand. Therefore, one of the
challenges I assumed years ago was to contribute to simplifying
the norms without sacrificing their reliability, to writing up
requirements that are easy to apply, and to making explanatory
and illustrative guidelines that people without professional
formation can use in the construction of social housing. Initially
this was highly criticized by the specialists, because it seemed
a trivialization of engineering, but these contributions were
gradually accepted and formally they began to be promoted in
many building codes in Latin America and the world. In some places
due to well-oriented processes of training we already can see
less vulnerable informal housing. What is lacking to obtain wider
coverage is a massive diffusion of these guidelines and simplified
techniques.
You created a “Centre for Disaster and Risk Studies” at
the University of Los Andes. To what extent do you feel this
step was important in promoting the subject in Latin America
and throughout the rest of the world?
In addition to this university research and extension centre,
which has been the technical “soul” of many prevention
projects developed in institutions in Colombia, other processes
have also helped. This includes the regular and e-learning graduate
programs on the subject of environment and risks run at the National
University of Colombia, Manizales, and the Technical University
of Catalonia, in Barcelona. These have been of immense importance
in “converting” a large number of professionals from
multiple disciplines to the integrated risk management paradigm
in many different countries of Ibero-America and the Caribbean.
In other words, it has been of special importance in providing
an option for superior education in the topic that serves to
professionalize the subject and integrate it with other development
activities.
What are your areas of concern today regarding disaster reduction?
My concern is not with a particular area, but, rather, in general.
Although many best and exemplary mitigation practices exist
that illustrate that reducing vulnerability -and therefore
risk- is possible, these best practices are the exception and
not the rule. For example, there are excellent cases of retrofitting
of schools and hospitals, of territorial planning considering
natural hazards, of education and training in the subject,
but these cases are one in ten thousand cases that need to
be implemented. One swallow does not make the Summer. The problem
is not the lack of knowledge but the lack of coverage and effectiveness
in the implementation of risk reduction. Far greater commitment
is needed than that existing at present in most countries.
According to you, what would be the most urgent priorities to
be carried out today in terms of disaster risk reduction?
One says frequently that there is not sufficient political will
amongst critical decision-makers and that it is urgent to have
that political will in order to obtain expected outcomes. In
general, I agree with that. Nevertheless, the problem is not
only the lack of political will but of political “feasibility”.
Unfortunately, in the developing countries, this feasibility
depends, from a political economy perspective, on the international
order in terms of economic dependency and of adopted development
models. Poverty generates disasters and the disasters generate
poverty. Risk management is or should be intimately related to
development planning and poverty reduction goals. I do not believe
that it is possible to speak of sustainable development if a
prevention strategy does not exist. Vulnerability reduction must
be an explicit objective of development planning.
Do you think that Latin American countries are advanced in terms
of disaster risk reduction compared to the rest of the world?
Due to the characteristics of its development process Latin America
and the Caribbean has been an exceptional laboratory for profound
reflection and debate by many researchers and practitioners as
regards disaster risk management and its relation with economic
and social development. Professionals such as those that formed
and developed the Network of Social Studies in Disaster Prevention
in Latin America, LA RED, have been true pioneers and advanced
thinkers that have contributed to base paradigmatic conceptual
changes that scarcely begin to be known in other parts of the
world. These important contributions are little known because
they have been published in good part in Spanish. Due to the
particular history and difficulties of development in these countries,
paradoxically many from the first world are not cognizant of
the solutions, conceptual progress and remarkable examples of
prevention that exist in Latin America.
Is there any thing else you wish to add?
Perhaps it is important to emphasize one aspect that has passed
unnoticed or that may seem to have already been solved by technicians
and scientists and which is the point of departure for the
implementation of any public policy on risk reduction, transfer,
or disaster management. Here I refer to the way risk is evaluated
and to the way this evaluation may stimulate mitigation. I
think that most evaluation techniques are inadequate. They
do not capture risk in the language of the diverse decision-makers
and they are not based on a holistic approach that “invites” intervention.
I think that it is necessary to “make risk manifest” in
different ways for those in charge of the economy, the environment,
infrastructure, agriculture, or health, to mention but some
areas. It is not the same, for example, to talk about risk
to a mayor or a community at the local level and to a governmental
authority of national order. If this is not corrected, if risk
is not made manifest in a suitable way such that it attracts
the attention of the stakeholders, it will not be feasible
to move forward decidedly in the reduction of disasters.
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Walter Hays
Certificate of distinction of the Sasakawa Award 2004
Dr. Walter W. Hays is an engineering seismologist. He is a Senior
Fellow in the Global Institute for Energy and Environmental Systems,
at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and is Executive
Director of the Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction (GADR).
Prior to this joint appointment in 2001, he served 2 years as
Senior Program Manager for Sustainable Built Environment in the
Professional and Technical Activities Division of the American
Society of Civil Engineers and for 26 years as Deputy Chief for
Research Applications in the United States Geological Survey's
Office of Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Engineering
His contributions to disaster risk management and educational
programs throughout the world include past and current programs
for UN organizations (e.g. UNESCO, WMO, UNDP, the former UNDRO,
and UN/ISDR), engineering, scientific and planning professional
organizations, the insurance industry, academia, NGO's, foreign
government organizations, and Federal, state, and local government
agencies in the United States. His leadership, personal involvement
in training and program development, his publications have initiated
or advanced a number of programs for disaster risk management,
reaching and benefiting many professionals throughout the world.
He has been considered eligible for a Certificate of Distinction
of the Sasakawa Award 2004, due to his longstanding commitment
to implementing and carrying out several natural disasters prevention
programs both in his country of origin as well as internationally.
He answered a few questions before his visit to Geneva.
Do you think we are moving towards a culture of disaster reduction?
Yes, a culture of disaster reduction is growing in both the scientific/technical
and political sectors of communities throughout the world. Growth
is slow, and directly related to (a) the increase each year in
the number and impacts of natural and technological disasters,
(b) the activities of the IDNDR during the 1990's and now the
ISDR in the 21st century, and (c) activities of many other cooperating
organizations throughout the world to marshal a complementary
global effort with ISDR and other UN agencies to increase the
capability of communities for becoming disaster resilient.
What are the main obstacles to implementing a culture of prevention?
The major obstacles are: ignorance, apathy, and in the box thinking
of a large percentage of the citizens, scientists, engineers,
planners, educators, and politicians in every community, and
the people.
Is education the main hope for implementing a culture of disaster
prevention?
Education at the community level of every nation will help reduce
ignorance of citizens, transform apathy into passion, and help
scientists, engineers, planners, emergency managers, and politicians
learn how to think outside the box as they consider the main
barriers to disaster reduction -- the Social, Technical, Administrative,
Political, Legal, and Economic (STAPLE) factors of their community.
Education is not a silver bullet for disaster reduction now,
but it could become one as a result of advances during the UNESCO
led Decade on Education for Sustainable Development (2005-2015,
and beyond).
How would you describe your current work?
My work is performed as Executive Director of the Global Alliance
for Disaster Reduction (GADR), an NGO comprised of over 1,000
members who are actively involved at present in finding solutions
to meet the full range of societal needs, including education,
associated with disaster reduction in over 70 countries. My
goal is to concentrate GADR’s culturally, technically
and geographically diverse human resources on building scientific/technical
and political capacity for disaster reduction at the community,
national and regional scales. GADR has developed and is continuing
to develop Global and Regional Blueprints for Change to facilitate
the ongoing process of helping communities to become resilient
to disasters from floods, severe windstorms, earthquakes, volcanic
eruptions, droughts and all other natural hazards, and is cooperating
with ISDR, UNESCO, WMO, UNDP, the World Bank, and more than
70 Supporting Organizations representing the public and private
sectors.
What is your main message to the world?
My message is that "We are all here to meet the serious
challenge posed by recurring natural and technological disasters
to our world." We all know what to do for each hazard, and
we all know how to improve cooperation, communication, coordination,
and collaboration at community, national and regional scales
to solve all of the problems we face together. The bottom line
is that “We just need to do it!” .
I believe that if we improve knowledge management and education, and improve
and sustain our linkages between professionals of the developing and developed
worlds, we can empower millions of people who have no role at present to have
a significant role in disaster reduction for the first time. As this process
unfolds, we will see many more people and their communities becoming scientifically
literate, self sufficient and resilient to disasters, even within the relatively
short time frame of the next decade, 2005-2015. This is possible because knowledge
and education are both integrating and facilitating mechanisms, and cooperation,
communication, coordination and collaboration at community, national and regional
scales are enabling mechanisms. In a global strategy, these mechanisms will
equip all professionals (e.g. scientists, engineers, planners, emergency managers,
educators and politicians) to realize the power of 1 + 1 = 2 (i.e. the highly
leveraged benefits that only come from working together).
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Gustavo Wilches-Chaux
Certificate of Distinction of the Sasakawa Award 2004
Born in 1954, Gustavo Wilches-Chaux is a writer from Popayan
(Colombia). He is a Doctor in Law and Political and Social Sciences
from the University of Cauca. He undertook post-graduate studies
in audiovisual production (Bristol Polytechnic, 1985) and disaster
management (Oxford Polytechnic, 1986) under the tutorial of Dr.
Ian Davis. He was in charge of the self-help reconstruction process
of low income families houses after the Popayan earthquake (1983)
and the reconstruction process of the Indian region of Tierradentro
(south west of Colombia) after the Paez earthquake (1994). Most
of his work is at the community level. He is the author of more
than 30 books and essays, including the now classic "La
Vulnerabilidad Global" ("Global vulnerability”),
in which he analyses the many dimensions participating in the
vulnerability/sustainability complex system. During the past
5 years, he has been promoting research and advocacy around human
rights, both of persons and communities affected by disasters.
He has just published his first book of science fiction stories: "El
Universo Amarrado a la Pata de la Cama" (The Universe tied
to the leg of the bed).
In light of his devoted and pioneering work in risk management
in his country’s local communities, Dr. Gustavo Wilches-Chaux
was a natural choice for a Certificate of Distinction of the
Sasakawa Award 2004. Particular attention was given to the multi-disciplinary
approach, environmental and sustainability aspects of his activities.
In addition to the active support and involvement of all age
categories of community members in prevention and risk management,
Dr. Wilches’ work gives particular emphasis to training,
education and capacity building for all community members.
A few words from Gustavo Wilches Chaux
“
I have always tried to help local leaders, educators and “common
people”, to understand and grasp scientific and technical
concepts related to environment and development. The knowledge
and cultural heritage of every individual and ofcommunities are
tools for change. Now, for example, I am working on how vulnerabilities
create new hazards, based on the experience of communities living
in the urban wetlands of Bogota city. A UNDP/BCPR consultancy
in which I am currently involved gives me the opportunity to
test my findings in other parts of Colombia, Bolivia, Jamaica
and Nicaragua. Most of my work –including my philosophy
work- comes from a permanent field experience at the community-ecosystem
level. I am also very interested in the ethics of risk management
and sustainability management and on the human rights of individuals
and communities affected by disasters”.
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