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Author(s) Hallegatte, Stephane; Rentschler, Jun; Walsh, Brian

Building back better: achieving resilience through stronger, faster, and more inclusive post-disaster reconstruction

Source
World Bank, the
Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR)

This report shows how the benefits of building back better could be greatest among the communities and countries that are hit by disasters most intensely and frequently. For a selection of small island states, this report shows that stronger, faster, and more inclusive recovery would lead to an average reduction in disaster-related well-being losses of 59 percent. For Antigua & Barbuda, the reduction is as large as 74 percent. 

This report is a follow-up to the 2017 Unbreakable report, which made the case that disaster losses disproportionately affect poor people. The report showed that they have limited ability to cope with disasters, and estimated that the impact on well-being is equivalent to consumption losses of about $520 billion a year around the world—outstripping previous estimates of pure asset losses by as much as 60 percent. 

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Building Back Better -Building Back Better -Achieving resilience through stronger, faster, and more inclusive post-disaster reconstruction PDF, 1.8 MB English

Last checked: 11 October 2022

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Explore further

Themes Inclusion Recovery Small Island Developing States (SIDS) Social impacts and social resilience
Number of pages
47 p.
Publication year
2018

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