Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice

Building Urban Resilience in East Asia is a World Bank program that aims to increase the resilience of cities to disasters and the impacts of climate change by using a risk-based approach to making public investment decisions. The objective is to d...

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Main Authors: Jha, Abhas K., Miner, Todd W., Stanton-Geddes, Zuzana
Format: Publication
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17423444/building-urban-resilience-principles-tools-practice
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13109
id okr-10986-13109
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-131092021-04-23T14:03:06Z Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice Jha, Abhas K. Miner, Todd W. Stanton-Geddes, Zuzana Resilience Uncertainty Disaster risk management Land use planning Risk assessment Urban ecosystems Urban upgrading Stakeholder participation Water supply Wastewater systems Transportation Disaster definitions Vulnerability Hazards Urban infrastructure Building Urban Resilience in East Asia is a World Bank program that aims to increase the resilience of cities to disasters and the impacts of climate change by using a risk-based approach to making public investment decisions. The objective is to demonstrate a scalable methodology and practical tools for risk assessment that can be used for city-level investment decisions. Working closely with the stakeholders involved in land use planning and infrastructure development, phase one of this program identified the major challenges facing urban decision makers in terms of risks from natural disasters and climate change and now offers open-source risk assessment tools that can be used by city-level institutions, other communities, private investors, and planners of infrastructure services. Phase two explores different investment options, management plans, and capacity building needs. The goal is to formulate a strategy in which flexible and 'low-regret' measures can be cost-effective even when risks are uncertain. Taking into account future risks and uncertainties, resilience relies on redundancy. Cities facing difficult decisions about scarce resources and investments strive for efficiency. Financial approaches to urban disaster resilience should reduce the negative impacts of disasters on individuals and communities, the private sector, and public entities. 2013-04-09T20:11:45Z 2013-04-09T20:11:45Z 2013-03-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17423444/building-urban-resilience-principles-tools-practice 978-0-8213-8865-5 10.1596/978-0-8213-8865-5 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13109 English en_US Directions in development : environment and sustainable development; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication East Asia and Pacific East Asia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic Resilience
Uncertainty
Disaster risk management
Land use planning
Risk assessment
Urban ecosystems
Urban upgrading
Stakeholder participation
Water supply
Wastewater systems
Transportation
Disaster definitions
Vulnerability
Hazards
Urban infrastructure
spellingShingle Resilience
Uncertainty
Disaster risk management
Land use planning
Risk assessment
Urban ecosystems
Urban upgrading
Stakeholder participation
Water supply
Wastewater systems
Transportation
Disaster definitions
Vulnerability
Hazards
Urban infrastructure
Jha, Abhas K.
Miner, Todd W.
Stanton-Geddes, Zuzana
Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
East Asia
relation Directions in development : environment and sustainable development;
description Building Urban Resilience in East Asia is a World Bank program that aims to increase the resilience of cities to disasters and the impacts of climate change by using a risk-based approach to making public investment decisions. The objective is to demonstrate a scalable methodology and practical tools for risk assessment that can be used for city-level investment decisions. Working closely with the stakeholders involved in land use planning and infrastructure development, phase one of this program identified the major challenges facing urban decision makers in terms of risks from natural disasters and climate change and now offers open-source risk assessment tools that can be used by city-level institutions, other communities, private investors, and planners of infrastructure services. Phase two explores different investment options, management plans, and capacity building needs. The goal is to formulate a strategy in which flexible and 'low-regret' measures can be cost-effective even when risks are uncertain. Taking into account future risks and uncertainties, resilience relies on redundancy. Cities facing difficult decisions about scarce resources and investments strive for efficiency. Financial approaches to urban disaster resilience should reduce the negative impacts of disasters on individuals and communities, the private sector, and public entities.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
author Jha, Abhas K.
Miner, Todd W.
Stanton-Geddes, Zuzana
author_facet Jha, Abhas K.
Miner, Todd W.
Stanton-Geddes, Zuzana
author_sort Jha, Abhas K.
title Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
title_short Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
title_full Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
title_fullStr Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
title_full_unstemmed Building Urban Resilience : Principles, Tools, and Practice
title_sort building urban resilience : principles, tools, and practice
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17423444/building-urban-resilience-principles-tools-practice
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13109
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