Seminar
On A Strategy For Community Disaster Reduction And Risk Management In
Human Settlements In Central America
The Central American
Coordination Center for Disaster Prevention (CEPREDENAC) and the Central
American Community Network for Risk Reduction organized a seminar-workshop
on A Strategy For Community Disaster Reduction And Risk Management In
Human Settlements In Central America.
The seminar was held
between 13 and 15 November 2000 in Costa Ricas old capital, Cartago.
It was part of the activities of the Strategic Framework for Vulnerability
and Disaster reduction in Central America and the Central American Five-Year
Plan for Vulnerability and Disaster Impact Reduction, both agreed upon
during the 10th Summit of Central American Presidents in October 1999.
The chief goal of
the seminar was to develop inputs and consensus on the design of a Regional
Strategy for Risk Management in the Housing and Human Settlements Sector
in Central America, which will be incorporated into the Regional Disaster
Reduction Plan that is coordinated by CEPREDENAC as the specialized agency
of the Central American Integration System (SICA).
As a starting point
for the discussions, participants reviewed a series of previous commitments
by governments in the region, such as the 2nd Habitat Agenda that was
adopted at the Habitat II World Conference held in Istanbul in 1996, the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966/76) and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966/76), which recognize housing
as a human right. Any person, regardless of sex, religion, age, race,
political beliefs or any other condition, has the right to adequate housing,
particularly women, children, the old, the disabled, and all other vulnerable
groups.
Given that little
attention has been paid to the implementation of these international agreements
and plans of action in Central America, the review chose to focus on the
following lines of action:
- Human beings at
the center of all actions. This is in agreement with the definition
of sustainable development adopted by the Alliance for Sustainable Development:
A process of progressive change in the quality of life of
human beings that place them at the center as the primary subjects of
development through economic growth with social equity.
- Citizen participation
and decentralization, as practices that must go hand in hand with risk
management.
- The definition
of spaces, priorities, and ambits for action. This requires a careful
study of risk factors, the settlements most vulnerable to natural or
manmade hazards, and the relationship between the structural housing
deficit and risk.
- Land use management.
The basis for any plan of action for preventing risk in human settlements
and for any program of sustainable development, land use management
must be understood as the spatial projection of the social, economic
and environmental goals and development policies.
- The fight against
poverty. While over half of the population continue to live in conditions
of poverty, it will be highly difficult to reduce risk without implementing
national policies and actions for improving the living conditions and
reducing the vulnerability factors that beset the poor.
- The location,
design, and building of new human settlements. There is a need to establish
strict and coherent standards for land use, urban development, and the
design and structure of housing, taking into account likely hazards
and attempting to mitigate vulnerability.
- Reduction of the
qualitative housing deficit. Measures must be implemented in the short,
medium, and long term to reduce the number of badly built or deteriorated
housing units that pose a threat to their inhabitants in the event of
a natural disaster.
- Improvement or
relocation of human settlements most at risk and secure title to the
land. Legal actions must be launched in the medium and short term to
procure land titles for informal settlers and squatters and to resettle
those who live in especially vulnerable areas.
- Building codes
and standards: Improving the installed building capacity. Building codes
must be improved, as well as improving the formal installed capacity
in the field of construction.
- Promoting a culture
of prevention: Training and Education. It is essential to build capacity
and provide the technical, theoretical, and practical skills needed
to transform our vulnerable societies into self-managing communities.
- The exchange of
experiences. When problems are similar in different countries or across
professional disciplines, the exchange of experiences and ideas encourages
horizontal cooperation across the region and facilitates the implementation
of appropriate solutions.
The meeting concluded
with the signing of the Tres Ríos Declaration, which in addition
to the points above stresses the need for real, effective community participation
in the development of a strategy for disaster reduction in human settlements
in Central America, including its application and the management of allocated
resources, and mechanisms to ensure that community input can influence
local, national and regional policies for decision making in risk management.
Representatives of
the Community Network from Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua,
Costa Rica and Panama took part in the meeting, as did government officials,
and members of international agencies, the United Nations, CEPREDENAC
and SICA.
For more information
please contact:
Red Comunitaria
Technical Secretariat
Nicaragua: Porfirio Gámez
Fax (505) 265-1244
mcn@nicarao.org.ni
Costa Rica: Enrique Tula
Fax (506) 283-5665 a
rkiplan@sol.racsa.co.cr
El Salvador: Samaria Cavaría
Fax (503) 284-4673 f
udecit@es.com.sv
CEPREDENAC
David Novelo
Fax (507) 316-0067
dnovelo@cepredenac.org
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