Volume 14 Issue 3
Jul.  2023
Turn off MathJax
Article Contents
Mohammad Abdul Quader, Amanat Ullah Khan, Md. Abdul Malak, Matthieu Kervyn. Mainstreaming Decentralization and Collaboration in Disaster Risk Management: Insights from Coastal Bangladesh[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2023, 14(3): 382-397. doi: 10.1007/s13753-023-00495-w
Citation: Mohammad Abdul Quader, Amanat Ullah Khan, Md. Abdul Malak, Matthieu Kervyn. Mainstreaming Decentralization and Collaboration in Disaster Risk Management: Insights from Coastal Bangladesh[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2023, 14(3): 382-397. doi: 10.1007/s13753-023-00495-w

Mainstreaming Decentralization and Collaboration in Disaster Risk Management: Insights from Coastal Bangladesh

doi: 10.1007/s13753-023-00495-w
Funds:

We want to extend our thanks to Elaine Newby for proofreading. The people who participated in this research are greatly acknowledged. We are grateful to VLIR-UOS (Flemish Inter-Universities Council) for providing funding for the Ph.D. study of Mohammad Abdul Quader.

  • Accepted Date: 2023-05-29
  • Available Online: 2023-07-03
  • Publish Date: 2023-06-26
  • Bangladesh is renowned in disaster risk reduction (DRR) for active involvement of community people and local disaster management institutions in DRR activities. Our study aimed to describe the disaster risk management (DRM) institutions and assess their functioning in six coastal unions across the three coastal zones of Bangladesh. Both qualitative and quantitative research approaches were used. The study focused on two key local institutions—the Union Disaster Management Committees (UDMCs) and the Cyclone Preparedness Program (CPP)—functioning at the union level in DRM. Such institutions have both horizontal and vertical collaborations with other institutions. However, we argue that the UDMCs’ external dependencies in their functioning indicate their limited financial and administrative autonomy, which is a barrier to successfully institutionalizing disaster management. The results show that the CPP is the most successful program, markedly increasing the trust of the people in warning dissemination and evacuation efforts in the event of a cyclone. Although the adoption of decentralized risk management systems has resulted in significant progress in increased rate of evacuation and reduced death rate and damage, lack of funding and equipment, limited coordination between institutions, lack of skilled and knowledgeable workforce, and inappropriate power structures may reduce the effectiveness of DRR activities prior to, during, and following disasters.
  • loading
  • Ahmed, M., and K. Iqbal. 2009. Disaster and decentralization. Social Science Research Network. https://ssrn.com/abstract=1424782. Accessed 25 Aug 2020.
    Ahsan, M.N. 2010. Climate change and socioeconomic vulnerability: Experiences and lessons from south-western coastal Bangladesh. Wageningen, The Netherlands: Wageningen University.
    Ahsan, D.A. 2014. Does natural disaster influence people’s risk preference and trust? An experiment from cyclone prone coast of Bangladesh. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 9: 48–57.
    Ainuddin, S., D.P. Aldrich, J.K. Routray, S. Ainuddin, and A. Achkazai. 2013. The need for local involvement: Decentralization of disaster management institutions in Baluchistan, Pakistan. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 6: 50–58.
    Alam, E., and N.S. Ray-Bennett. 2021. Disaster risk governance for district-level landslide risk management in Bangladesh. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 59: Article 102220.
    Allen, K.M. 2006. Community-based disaster preparedness and climate adaptation: Local capacity-building in the Philippines. Disasters 30(1): 81–101.
    Bae, Y., Y.-M. Joo, and S.-Y. Won. 2016. Decentralization and collaborative disaster governance: Evidence from South Korea. Habitat International 52: 50–56.
    CDMP (Comprehensive Disaster Management Programme). 2010. Cyclone shelter information for management of tsunami and cyclone preparedness. In Comprehensive Disaster Management Programme, Ministry of Disaster and Relief, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
    Choudhury, J.R. 2008. Disaster risk reduction national coordinating mechanisms in Bangladesh. https://www.preventionweb.net/files/3559_BangladeshNPworkshopDavos240808.pdf. Accessed 22 May 2023.
    Choudhury, M.U.I., M.S. Uddin, and C.E. Haque. 2019. Nature brings us extreme events, some people cause us prolonged sufferings: The role of good governance in building community resilience to natural disasters in Bangladesh. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 62(10): 1761–1781.
    CPP (Cyclone Preparedness Programme). 2019. 50 years of Cyclone Preparedness Program (CPP), ed. MoDMR. Dhaka: Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh.
    Demeter, K., N.E. Erkan, and A. Güner. 2004. The role of local governments in reducing the risk of disasters. Washington, DC: World Bank.
    DDM (Department of Disaster Management). 2010. Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. http://www.ddm.gov.bd/site/view/policies. Accessed 12 Dec 2013 (in Bengali).
    DDM (Department of Disaster Management). 2019. Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. http://www.ddm.gov.bd/site/view/policies. Accessed 30 May 2021 (in Bengali).
    Faguet, J.P. 2014. Decentralization and governance. World Development 53: 2–13.
    Fakhruddin, S., and J. Rahman. 2015. Coping with coastal risk and vulnerabilities in Bangladesh. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 12: 112–118.
    Garschagen, M. 2016. Decentralizing urban disaster risk management in a centralized system? Agendas, actors and contentions in Vietnam. Habitat International 52: 43–49.
    GoB (Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh). 2015. National Disaster Management Policy 2015, ed. MoDMR. Dhaka: Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh.
    GoB (Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh). 2021. Planning Commission, Ministry of Planning. Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. http://www.plancomm.gov.bd/site/files. Accessed 15 May 2021 (in Bengali).
    Ha, H., and A. Ahmad. 2015. Bangladesh: Natural disaster risk management. In Land and disaster management strategies in Asia, ed. H. Ha, 83–98. Heidelberg: Springer.
    Haque, C.E., and M.S. Uddin. 2013. Disaster management discourse in Bangladesh: A shift from post-event response to the preparedness and mitigation approach through institutional partnerships. In Approaches to disaster management - Examining the implications of hazards, emergencies and disasters, ed. J.P. Tiefenbacher. London: IntechOpen.
    Hermansson, H. 2019. Challenges to decentralization of disaster management in Turkey: The role of political-administrative context. International Journal of Public Administration 42(5): 417–431.
    Islam, M.A. 1974. Tropical cyclones: Coastal Bangladesh. In Natural hazards: Local, national, global, ed. G.F. White, 19–24. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Jha, A.K., and Z. Stanton-Geddes. 2013. Strong, safe, and resilient: A strategic policy guide for disaster risk management in East Asia and the Pacific. Washington, DC: The World Bank.
    Jones, S., K. Aryal, and A. Collins. 2013. Local-level governance of risk and resilience in Nepal. Disasters 37(3): 442–467.
    Karim, M.F., and N. Mimura. 2008. Impacts of climate change and sea-level rise on cyclonic storm surge floods in Bangladesh. Global Environmental Change 18(3): 490–500.
    Messer, N.M. 2003. The role of local institutions and their interaction in disaster risk mitigation: A literature review. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization.
    Miller, M.A., and M. Douglass. 2016. Introduction: Decentralising disaster governance in urbanising Asia. Habitat International 52: Article 14.
    MoDMR (Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief). 2019. Standing order on disaster. Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. https://modmr.portal.gov.bd/sites/default/files/files/modmr.portal.gov.bd/policies/7a9f5844_76c0_46f6_9d8a_5e176d2510b9/SOD%202019%20_English_FINAL.pdf. Accessed 18 Jul 2020.
    Mohibbullah, M., A.K. Gain, and M.N. Ahsan. 2021. Examining local institutional networks for sustainable disaster management: Empirical evidence from the South-West coastal areas in Bangladesh. Environmental Science & Policy 124: 433–440.
    Nottage, L., H. Nasu, and S. Butt. 2014. Disaster management: Socio-legal and Asia-Pacific perspectives. In Asia-Pacific disaster management, ed. S. Butt, H. Nasu, and L. Nottag, 1–58. Heidelberg: Springer.
    Parvin, G.A., M. Sakamoto, R. Shaw, H. Nakagawa, and M.S. Sadik. 2019. Evacuation scenarios of cyclone Aila in Bangladesh: Investigating the factors influencing evacuation decision and destination. Progress in Disaster Science 2: Article 100032.
    Paul, S.K. 2014. Determinants of evacuation response to cyclone warning in coastal areas of Bangladesh: A comparative study. Oriental Geographer 55(1–2): 57–84.
    Paul, S.K., and J.K. Routray. 2011. Household response to cyclone and induced surge in coastal Bangladesh: Coping strategies and explanatory variables. Natural Hazards 57(2): 477–499.
    Pollitt, C. 2007. Decentralization. In The Oxford handbook of public management, ed. E. Ferlie, L.E. Lynn, and C. Pollitt, 371–397. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Prud’Homme, R. 1995. The dangers of decentralization. The World Bank Research Observer 10(2): 201–220.
    Putra, D.I., and M. Matsuyuki. 2019. Disaster management following decentralization in Indonesia: Regulation, institutional establishment, planning, and budgeting. Journal of Disaster Research 14(1): 173–187.
    Quader, M.A., A.U. Khan, and M. Kervyn. 2021. Spatial variation in household-level risk to natural hazards across the coast of Bangladesh. Geomatics, Natural Hazards Risk 12(1): 1532–1559.
    Rahman, M.A., and S. Rahman. 2015. Natural and traditional defense mechanisms to reduce climate risks in coastal zones of Bangladesh. Weather and Climate Extremes 7: 84–95.
    Rumbach, A. 2016. Decentralization and small cities: Towards more effective urban disaster governance?. Habitat International 52: 35–42.
    Sabur, A.A. 2012. Disaster management system in Bangladesh: An overview. India Quarterly 68(1): 29–47.
    Saroar, M.M., and J.K. Routray. 2012. Impacts of climatic disasters in coastal Bangladesh: Why does private adaptive capacity differ?. Regional Environmental Change 12(1): 169–190.
    Scott, Z., and M. Tarazona. 2011. Study on disaster risk reduction, decentralization and political economy. Global assessment report on disaster risk reduction. Geneva: United Nations.
    Shaw, R., A. Islam, and F. Mallick. 2013. National perspectives of disaster risk reduction in Bangladesh. In Disaster risk reduction approaches in Bangladesh, ed. R. Shaw, F. Mallick, and A. Islam, 45–62. Heidelberg: Springer.
    Skidmore, M., and H. Toya. 2013. Natural disaster impacts and fiscal decentralization. Land Economics 89(1): 101–117.
    Tanzi, V. 1996. Macroeconomic aspects. In Annual World Bank conference on development economics 1996, ed. M. Bruno, and B. Pleskovic. Washington, DC: World Bank Group.
    Treisman, D. 2007. The architecture of government: Rethinking political decentralization. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
    UN (United Nations). 2015. Sendai framework for disaster risk reduction 2015–2030. Geneva: United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction.
    UNISDR (United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction). 2012. Reducing vulnerability and exposure to disasters. https://www.unisdr.org/files/29288_apdrexecsummary.pdf. Accessed 22 May 2023.
  • 加载中

Catalog

    通讯作者: 陈斌, bchen63@163.com
    • 1. 

      沈阳化工大学材料科学与工程学院 沈阳 110142

    1. 本站搜索
    2. 百度学术搜索
    3. 万方数据库搜索
    4. CNKI搜索

    Article Metrics

    Article views (214) PDF downloads(0) Cited by()
    Proportional views
    Related

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return