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Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November 2010
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Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments

(HRNA)

United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery

Bangkok, ThailandNovember 2010

Page 2: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Presentation Aim

◌To introduce and justify Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) as a key element of PDNAs

◌To provide examples from Asia of recent approaches to HRNA

Page 3: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Presentation Order

◌What is HRNA and why is it important?

◌Who does HRNAs and how are they done?

◌Where can I find resources on HRNA?

◌What are examples of HRNA in Asia?

◌What are the lessons and challenges from recent experiences with HRNA?

Page 4: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

What is HRNA?

◌HRNA is shorthand for “Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments”

◌HRNA are assessments that determine the requirements for the full resilient recovery of human development for affected populations, including the restoration of governance systems

◌“Resilient” recovery means that disaster risks are reduced (Sometimes called “holistic recovery” or “sustainable recovery”)

Page 5: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Recovery of Human Development: Definition

Measures to restore people’s abilities to recover their full potential to lead productive, creative lives in accordance with their needs and interests.

In reference to Human Development

Page 6: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Recovery and Human Development PathsHuman Development Index (HDI)

MDG

Pre-Crisis Development Path

Pre disaster HDI

Recovery Path

Relief

6 to 12 months 5 to 10 years Time

Page 7: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Why recovery of human development?

◌Development experts have learned importance of multi-disciplinary approaches to twin pillars of economic development and human development.

◌Neither approach replaces the other; two complimentary streams of analysis (DaLA and HRNA)

◌HRNA reflects concerns/priorities of individuals and stakeholders viz DaLA’s orientation to national accounts

◌Relationship between DaLA and actual recovery needs not straightforward; governments requesting more analysis to ensure recovery of human development

Page 8: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Why? continued...◌The needs and priorities identified by the

affected communities themselves are neglected ◌Insufficient attention is often given to the social

impacts of disasters◌Local knowledge, resources and experience are

not adequately addressed ◌While macro-level socio-economic data is often

collected, much information is missed at the meso- and micro-levels

◌Important opportunities may be missed

Page 9: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Who does HRNA?

◌Government led; Government sectoral specialists; Line ministries/departments/offices

◌PDNA sector teams◌Supported by specialised UN agencies as per

mandates, global conventions, etc.◌Informed by and builds on humanitarian

institutions and processes◌And, disaster-affected key stakeholders…

Page 10: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

What is the focus of HRNAs?◌Effects of disaster on social/community/

household functions & processes◌Priorities for recovery interventions, sequencing

and focus areas◌Needs for resources for interventions in

monetary terms◌Capacities required to meet recovery objectives

(& measures to address gaps)◌Risk reduction measures to ensure resilient

recovery

Page 11: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

HRNA for each sector:Should estimates impacts and requirements for:

Restoration of governance systems Measures to ensure access for all to reconstructed

infrastructure Approaches to fully restore livelihood systems Pressing basic needs and services Re-establishment of community functioning Support spontaneous recovery Post disaster capacity building Enhancing resilience against & reducing disaster risks

Page 12: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Where to find resources?◌Guidance is found in “Sectoral and Thematic

Methodologies for Assessing Human Impacts and Recovery Needs” (coming soon!)

◌Chapters can be found here: www.recoveryplatform.org/PDNA

◌For example: Agriculture; Community Infrastructure; Culture; Disaster Risk Reduction; Education; Environment; Gender; Governance; Health; Housing, Land, Property and Human Settlements; Information Management; Livelihoods, Employment and Income; Use of Geospatial Information and Satellite Derived Products…and more…

Page 13: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

www.recoveryplatform.org/PDNA

Page 14: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Country example, HRNA - Indonesia

◌HRNA embedded in legal framework

◌Linked to financing facility

◌Adapting global guidance for country context

◌Improved through application and post-crisis learning

◌Committed government leadership

◌UN-supported

Page 15: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Country example, HRNA - Myanmar

◌2008 Cyclone Nargis◌Focus on affected communities’ perspectives

through Village Tract Assessment ◌Part of the Post-Nargis Joint Assessment (PONJA)

coordinated by ASEAN* Perceptions of why the disaster was so bad. * Proportion of deaths by age and gender. * Support needed by communities. * Priorities for repairing infrastructure. * Household expenditure priorities.

Page 16: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

VTA: 30 most affected townships Loss of

◌food stocks

◌agricultural income

◌fisheries income

◌livestock income

◌seed stocks

◌shelter

Levels of destructionChanging nature of

temporary shelter

Salination of ponds Sanitation situationDamage to schoolsAccess to creditLevels of psychological

stressReach of humanitarian

efforts

Page 17: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Country example, Pakistan

◌2010 Monsoon Floods

◌No PDNA…but “Damage and Needs Assessment” led by IFIs…

◌UN: Focus on impact of floods on human development, using MDGs as proxies

Page 18: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Gross and Net Primary Enrollment

Page 19: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

MDG 2: Survival Rate (Primary Education)

Page 20: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Lessons & Challenges of HRNA◌Best to prepare for recovery planning before disasters◌Methodologies evolving rapidly, limited dissemination◌An approach versus a single methodology◌Different institutions have different expectations/uses of

PDNA materials, including DaLA and HRNA; can be challenging to reconcile and prioritise

◌DaLA can consume most of the available PDNA technical resources; experts must be dedicated to HRNA

◌Without champions, voices of disaster-affected communities do not inform recovery processes

◌Without HRNA leaders, “PDNAs” can be limited to DaLA◌Timing is challenging, given humanitarian imperatives

Page 21: Human Development Recovery Needs Assessments (HRNA) United Nations Development Programme Bureau for Crisis Prevention & Recovery Bangkok, Thailand November.

Thank you

◌Questions, Observations or Comments?