Best practice post-disaster housing and livelihood recovery interventions: winners and losers

Type Journal Article - International Development Planning Review
Title Best practice post-disaster housing and livelihood recovery interventions: winners and losers
Author(s)
Volume 37
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 165-185
URL http://www.alnap.org/pool/files/tafti-and-tomlinson.pdf
Abstract
A review of the recent post-disaster recovery interventions in developing countries shows convergent trends
in policies and practices. The World Bank has been in a position to exert its influence on post-disaster
housing and livelihood recovery interventions, which has resulted in converging policies and practices.
This paper focuses on the nexus between housing and livelihood recovery after disasters, highlighting
the importance of rethinking the existing sector-based disaster recovery interventions. Focusing on the
case studies of the 2001 earthquake in Bhuj, Gujarat, and 2003 earthquake in Bam, Iran, and drawing
on subsequent major disasters in Sri Lanka and Pakistan, the article analyses a number of shortcomings
in knowledge transfer on post-disaster housing and livelihood recovery. This knowledge transfer has
rarely exposed and discussed the limitations of these policies, the gaps in knowledge concerning the
impacts of these polices or the lessons learned about recurring problems arising from the interpretation
and implementation of these policies. More importantly, the article discusses how the prescriptive nature
of best practice housing recovery and the sector-based structure of recovery interventions overlook the
needs and priorities of households and impact on their ability to achieve recovery

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