Navigation failed to load. If you are on the UNDRR office network, your browser may be blocking access to external resources. Learn how to allow access.
This Guidance Note provides action-oriented guidance to local and national government officials, key decision-makers and other stakeholders on ways to encourage, enable and facilitate successful private sector participation in post-disaster recovery.
World Bank, the
Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR)
This note highlights the critical contribution that social protection can make to a broader disaster recovery effort by providing assistance directly to disaster-affected households.
World Bank, the
Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR)
The Technical Note on Overall Operational Guidance provides further elaboration on the guidance and tools introduced in chapter three of the CURE position paper, ‘Implementing the CURE Framework.’
The CURE Framework draws from existing frameworks and tools for reconstruction and recovery in urban settings. It seeks to knit together people-centered and place-based approaches to produce integrated policies that share a common cultural thread.
The CURE Framework draws from existing frameworks and tools for reconstruction and recovery in urban settings. It seeks to knit together people-centered and place-based approaches to produce integrated policies that share a common cultural thread.
World Bank, the
Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR)
This guide informs Governments, United Nations agencies, International NGO's, the Private Sector and other stakeholders on how to engage communities in every step of the recovery process.
This publication offers a set of guiding, action-oriented principles and practical cases to support recovering communities as they plan and implement recovery.
This brief is offered to define the COVID-19 recovery context and to supplement existing guidance with key principles and practices to guide recovery planning.
This compendium presents good practices in post-disaster recovery in Latin America and the Caribbean in order to spread and highlight the work and recovery processes taking place in different countries of the region.
This research presents findings on planners’ roles, experiences, and needs in disaster recovery, informing the development of practical recovery guidance for planning professionals.