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" Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“

Flood Conference – ICLR, May 6-8, 2008, Toronto, Canada Assessment of Social Vulnerability at Sub-national Scale Dr.-Ing. Jörn Birkmann & Alexander Fekete. " Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“ United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security

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" Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“

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  1. Flood Conference – ICLR, May 6-8, 2008, Toronto, Canada Assessment of Social Vulnerability at Sub-national Scale Dr.-Ing. Jörn Birkmann & Alexander Fekete "Advancing Knowledge for Human Security and Development“ United Nations UniversityInstitute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  2. Content • Motivation • Vulnerability – Different Schools of Thought • Conceptual Framework • Assessment Process for the Sub-National Level • Data Limitations • Scale Issues • Conclusions Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  3. Understanding of Vulnerability Fundamental Equation of Risk Analysis consequences due to flooding [EUR] risk = probability of failure of coastal defences [1/a] X Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Source: Stephan Mai 2006

  4. Expected Damage total economic value Euro/m² Source: Stephan Mai 2006 Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  5. Social Vulnerability • Tsunami 2004: Gender imbalance • Katrina 2005: Institutional failure; but also ethnical • Banat flood 2005: Cultural acquaintance; - duration Sri Lanka New Orleans - Superdome www.hurricanekatrina.com www.ukim.org Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  6. Vulnerability Definitions “... a human condition or process resulting from physical, social, economic, and environmental factors which determine the likelihood and scale of damage from the impact of a given hazard“ (UNDP, 2004) “... the likelihood of injury, death, loss, disruption of livelihood or other harm in an extreme event, and/or unusual difficulties in recovering from such effects“ (Wisner, 2002) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  7. Social Vulnerability in Germany • Are some social groups more vulnerable ? Baseline social problems in Germany: • Unemployment • Migration; ethnic integration; racism • Ageing of the population; pension security • Relative poverty gap Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  8. Project DISFLOOD Boundary-Conditions • Data availability for the whole research area • End-user:- Administrative units • Target definition- Comparability- Completeness • Identify social and ecological vulnerability • Interlink vulnerability to hazard • Provide overview for 3 river-areas • GIS Integration Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  9. The BBC-Framework Source: Bogardi/Birkmann (2004) and Cardona (1999/2001) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  10. Social Vulnerability Index -Criteria Exposure Potential • People • Settlement area Sensitivity • Unemployment, welfare dependence • Ethnic and economic conditions • Age, dependency, gender Capacities • Income and building type • Education and medical supply • Physical vitality Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  11. Social Vulnerability Index • Input: 34 variables of Federal statistical data 2006 • Method: Factor analysis, with varimax rotation • Result: 4 Composite factors that indicate vulnerability • Income • Population density • Physical fragility, age • Lack of medical care Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  12. General Social Vulnerability Index Which social groups are more vulnerable? • 34 demographic variablese.g. age, education, income • Map shows general vulnerability • Comparable studies on county level in USA, UK, Spain, Germany Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Data: Federal statistical office 2007, BKG 2007

  13. Ecological Vulnerability Aggregation to county scale enables integration DISFLOOD - Marion Damm Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  14. Hazard-Specific Vulnerability • Flood experience • Critical infrastructure • Early warning systems Scale implications: Availability only for certain areas Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  15. Exposure-Degree • Percentage of flooded settlement area per county Data: CORINE 2000, HQ extreme IKSR 2001 Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  16. Integration: Hazards & Vulnerability Risk = f(hazards; vulnerabilities) Vulnerability = exposure, sensitivity, capacities = the internal predisposition Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  17. Outlook - Disaster Risk Index • Combines social and ecological vulnerability • Combines hazard and vulnerability parameters • Data is normalised, • equal weighting, • ranks after standard deviations Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  18. HIERARCHY Constraints level: e.g. economic and political dynamics of the country Level of focus: Vulnerability Phenomenon Reductionist components: Validation by household questionnaire Lit.: Gibson et al. 2000, O‘Neill 1988 Scale Implications • Multiple-scale problems Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

  19. Scale of the Hazard City of Cologne Scale implication: Extreme event data more suitable for sub-national scale Legend: Blue line: HQ100 Blue area: HQ extreme Symbols: Infrastructure Outlook: more detailed study on local level – BBK study (Birkmann) Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu Fekete 2007

  20. www.ehs.unu.edu Literature/Reports birkmann@ehs.unu.edu & fekete@ehs.unu.edu Dr.-Ing. Birkmann UNU-EHSbirkmann@ehs.unu.edu

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