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Author(s) Twigg, John; Lovell, Emma; Schofield, Holly; Morel, Luisa Miranda; Flinn, Bill; Sargeant, Susanne; Finlayson, Andrew; Dijkstra, Tom; Stephenson, Victoria; Albuerne, Alejandra; Rossetto, Tiziana; D’Ayala, Dina

Self-recovery from disasters: an interdisciplinary perspective

Source
ODI Global

This working paper presents the findings from a pilot research project that investigated how disaster-affected households in low- and middle-income countries rebuild their homes in situations where little or no support is available from humanitarian agencies. The project was an interdisciplinary collaboration involving social scientists, geoscientists, structural engineers and humanitarian practitioners.

The work was broad in scope. It investigated households’ self-recovery trajectories and the wide range of technical, environmental, institutional and socioeconomic factors influencing them over time. It also considered how safer construction practices can be more effectively integrated into humanitarian shelter responses.

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Access “Self-Recovery” mula sa mga Sakuna (Tagalog executive summary).pdf
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Access स्वप्रयास मार्फत विपद् बाट पुनर्लाभ अन्तर-विषयात्मक दृष्टिकोण (Nepali executive summary).pdf
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Access Self-recovery from disasters an interdisciplinary perspective
Download a backup copy hosted by this site PDF, 1.6 MB English

We keep a copy of many documents to improve long-term access. Use this if the publisher’s site is slow or unavailable. Problems? Contact us.

Access Self-recovery from disasters: an interdisciplinary perspective (Executive summary)
Download a backup copy hosted by this site PDF, 1 MB English

We keep a copy of many documents to improve long-term access. Use this if the publisher’s site is slow or unavailable. Problems? Contact us.

Last checked: 20 October 2021

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Themes Recovery Shelter and housing Structural safety
Country and region Nepal Philippines
Number of pages
48 p.
Publication year
2017

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