Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
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Explain what Community Risk Assessment (CRA) is and why it is important
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Understand the key steps involved in conducting a CRA
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Identify hazards, vulnerabilities, and capacities within a community
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Appreciate the role of community participation in risk assessment
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Apply CRA concepts to a real community setting
Lesson Introduction
Disasters affect communities differently. Some communities recover quickly, while others suffer long-term losses. The reason for this difference is risk, and risk looks different in every community. This is why Community Risk Assessment (CRA) is a critical tool in Disaster Risk Management.
Community Risk Assessment is a participatory process that helps communities identify the disasters they face, understand who and what is most at risk, and recognize the strengths they already have. CRA moves disaster management away from guesswork and assumptions and toward evidence-based and community-driven action.
What Is Community Risk Assessment (CRA)?
Community Risk Assessment is a structured process where community members and facilitators work together to identify:
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Hazards that threaten the community
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Vulnerabilities that increase harm
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Capacities that reduce risk
CRA focuses on local knowledge. People who live in a community understand its risks better than outsiders. They know where floods occur, who suffers most, and what coping strategies already exist.
👉 CRA is not done for the community; it is done with the community.
Why Community Risk Assessment Is Important
CRA is important because it:
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Identifies real risks, not assumed risks
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Helps prioritize actions based on evidence
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Builds community ownership and trust
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Improves preparedness and prevention
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Supports better project and development planning
Without CRA, disaster plans often fail because they ignore local realities.
Key Steps in Community Risk Assessment
Although CRA methods may vary, the core steps remain the same.
1. Community Engagement and Preparation
The process begins by:
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Identifying community leaders and groups
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Explaining the purpose of the assessment
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Building trust and encouraging participation
Inclusion is important. Women, youth, elderly people, and people with disabilities must be involved.
2. Hazard Identification
The community identifies hazards that affect them, such as:
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Floods
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Droughts
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Fires
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Disease outbreaks
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Strong winds or storms
Communities often use hazard mapping, where they draw a simple map showing risky areas like flood zones or landslide-prone slopes.
3. Vulnerability Assessment
Next, the community discusses who is most at risk and why. Vulnerability may be linked to:
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Poverty
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Weak housing
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Poor health
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Location
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Livelihood type
Example:
Children, elderly people, and informal traders may be more vulnerable during floods.
4. Capacity Assessment
Capacity assessment identifies strengths that reduce risk, such as:
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Local skills and knowledge
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Community groups and volunteers
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Early warning practices
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Safe buildings
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Local leadership
This step is important because CRA is not only about problems — it is also about solutions.
5. Risk Analysis and Prioritization
Finally, the community ranks risks based on:
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Likelihood of occurrence
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Severity of impact
This helps decide which risks need immediate attention and which can be managed over time.
Real-Life Example
A riverside community conducts a CRA:
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Hazard: Seasonal flooding
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Vulnerability: Houses built close to the river, poverty
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Capacity: Strong community leadership, boats for evacuation
Result:
The community prioritizes flood early warnings and relocation of the most vulnerable households.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Ignoring community voices
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Focusing only on hazards, not vulnerability
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Treating CRA as a one-time activity
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Excluding vulnerable groups
Practical Exercise
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Choose a real community you know
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List three hazards affecting it
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Identify two vulnerable groups
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List two existing capacities
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Decide which risk should be addressed first
Key Takeaways
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CRA is participatory and community-driven
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It identifies hazards, vulnerabilities, and capacities
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It supports effective disaster planning
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Local knowledge is essential
Lesson Conclusion
Community Risk Assessment is the foundation of effective Disaster Risk Management. It empowers communities to understand their own risks and take informed action before disasters strike. When CRA is done well, it transforms communities from passive victims into active risk managers. By listening to community voices and using simple assessment tools, disaster risk can be reduced, lives can be protected, and development can become safer and more sustainable.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
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Clearly explain what hazard identification and hazard profiling mean
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Identify different types of hazards affecting a community or area
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Analyze the characteristics of hazards, including frequency and impact
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Use simple tools to profile hazards in real-life settings
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Apply hazard profiling results to disaster planning and risk reduction
Lesson Introduction
Before disasters can be reduced, hazards must first be clearly identified and understood. Many disaster plans fail because they are based on assumptions rather than real hazard information. Hazard identification and profiling helps communities and organizations move from guessing to informed decision-making.
A hazard may exist for many years without causing serious harm. However, when its characteristics are not understood, it can suddenly turn into a devastating disaster. This lesson focuses on how to systematically identify hazards and describe their behavior so that effective prevention and preparedness actions can be taken.
What Is Hazard Identification?
Hazard identification is the process of recognizing and listing all potential hazards that can affect a specific area, community, or system.
Hazards may include:
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Natural hazards (floods, droughts, storms, earthquakes)
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Human-induced hazards (fires, industrial accidents, building collapse)
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Biological hazards (disease outbreaks, food contamination)
Hazard identification answers a simple but important question:
“What can go wrong here?”
This process should involve:
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Community members
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Local leaders
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Technical staff where available
Local knowledge is critical because people who live in the area understand past events and hidden risks.
What Is Hazard Profiling?
Hazard profiling goes deeper than identification. It involves analyzing each hazard to understand how it behaves and how dangerous it is.
A hazard profile describes:
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Type of hazard (flood, fire, disease, etc.)
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Frequency (how often it occurs)
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Intensity or severity (how strong or damaging it is)
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Duration (how long it lasts)
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Speed of onset (sudden or slow)
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Area affected
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Seasonality (when it usually occurs)
Hazard profiling answers the question:
“How does this hazard behave, and how dangerous is it?”
Why Hazard Profiling Is Important
Hazard profiling helps to:
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Prioritize the most dangerous hazards
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Design appropriate early warning systems
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Improve preparedness and evacuation planning
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Support land-use and development planning
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Reduce loss of life and property
For example, slow-onset hazards like drought require long-term planning, while fast-onset hazards like floods require rapid warning and response systems.
Steps in Hazard Identification and Profiling
Step 1: List All Hazards
Using community discussions and past records, list all hazards that have occurred or could occur in the area.
Step 2: Collect Information
Gather information from:
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Community memories
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Local authorities
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Health centers
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Meteorological data (if available)
Step 3: Describe Hazard Characteristics
For each hazard, document:
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How often it occurs
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How severe it is
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Who or what it affects most
A simple table can be used to record this information.
Practical Community Example
A community identifies flooding as a major hazard.
Hazard profile:
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Type: Flood
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Frequency: Every rainy season
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Intensity: Moderate to severe
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Duration: 2–5 days
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Speed of onset: Rapid
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Area affected: Low-lying households
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Seasonality: December–March
This profile helps the community plan evacuation routes and early warning systems.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Ignoring small but frequent hazards
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Focusing only on rare major disasters
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Using only external data and ignoring local knowledge
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Failing to update hazard profiles regularly
Hazard profiles should be reviewed and updated as conditions change.
Practical Exercise
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Choose one community or institution you know
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List three major hazards affecting it
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Profile one hazard using the following:
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Frequency
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Severity
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Duration
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Seasonality
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Identify one action that could reduce risk
Key Takeaways
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Hazard identification lists potential dangers
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Hazard profiling explains how hazards behave
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Local knowledge is essential
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Profiling supports effective disaster planning
Lesson Conclusion
Hazard identification and profiling form the technical backbone of Disaster Risk Management. Without understanding hazards, disaster planning becomes weak and ineffective. By carefully identifying hazards and analyzing their characteristics, communities and organizations can anticipate danger, prepare appropriately, and reduce losses. Hazard profiling transforms disasters from sudden surprises into manageable risks, making it a critical step toward resilience and sustainable development.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
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Explain what vulnerability means in Disaster Risk Management
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Identify different types of vulnerability within a community
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Understand why some people suffer more during disasters than others
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Conduct a basic vulnerability assessment using practical tools
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Use vulnerability information to improve disaster planning and protection
Lesson Introduction
When disasters strike, they do not affect everyone in the same way. Some people lose their homes, livelihoods, or even their lives, while others recover quickly. This difference is explained by vulnerability. Vulnerability assessment helps us answer one critical question:
Who is most at risk, and why?
Understanding vulnerability is essential because disasters are not only about hazards like floods or droughts. They are about people’s living conditions, choices, and opportunities. This lesson focuses on identifying vulnerable groups and understanding the factors that increase their risk.
What Is Vulnerability?
Vulnerability refers to the conditions that make individuals, households, or communities more likely to suffer harm when a hazard occurs.
Vulnerability is influenced by factors such as:
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Poverty and lack of income
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Weak or unsafe housing
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Poor health and disability
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Limited access to information
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Social exclusion or discrimination
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Dependence on climate-sensitive livelihoods
Important point:
👉 Vulnerability is not weakness. It is often created by social, economic, and political conditions beyond people’s control.
Types of Vulnerability
Vulnerability has several dimensions. Understanding these helps identify who is most at risk.
1. Physical Vulnerability
This relates to:
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Location of homes (floodplains, slopes)
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Quality of buildings
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Access to safe infrastructure
Example:
Houses built with mud walls near a river are more physically vulnerable to floods.
2. Social Vulnerability
This relates to:
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Age (children, elderly)
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Gender
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Disability
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Education levels
Example:
Elderly people may struggle to evacuate quickly during floods.
3. Economic Vulnerability
This relates to:
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Income levels
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Employment type
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Savings and assets
Example:
Daily wage earners lose income immediately after disasters and may struggle to recover.
4. Environmental Vulnerability
This relates to:
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Degraded land
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Deforestation
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Poor drainage
Environmental damage increases exposure to hazards.
Why Vulnerability Assessment Is Important
Vulnerability assessment helps to:
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Protect the most at-risk groups
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Prioritize limited resources
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Design inclusive disaster plans
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Reduce long-term poverty and suffering
Without vulnerability assessment, disaster response often benefits stronger groups first, leaving the most vulnerable behind.
Steps in Conducting a Vulnerability Assessment
Step 1: Identify Vulnerable Groups
Through community discussions, identify groups such as:
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Children
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Elderly people
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People with disabilities
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Pregnant women
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Female-headed households
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Informal settlers
Step 2: Identify Vulnerability Factors
Ask:
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Where do they live?
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What livelihoods do they depend on?
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What barriers limit their safety or recovery?
Step 3: Analyze Risk Exposure
Link vulnerability to hazards:
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Who is affected by floods most?
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Who struggles during droughts?
This step connects vulnerability directly to hazard impacts.
Real-Life Community Example
In a flood-prone settlement:
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Children are at risk of drowning
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Elderly people cannot evacuate quickly
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Informal traders lose goods and income
Vulnerability assessment helps planners:
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Design safe evacuation plans
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Target early warnings
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Provide appropriate shelters
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Treating all community members the same
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Ignoring gender and disability issues
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Relying only on statistics without community input
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Labeling people instead of understanding conditions
Practical Exercise
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Choose a community you know
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List three vulnerable groups
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Identify two reasons each group is vulnerable
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Suggest one action to reduce their vulnerability
Key Takeaways
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Vulnerability explains unequal disaster impacts
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It is shaped by social, economic, and physical factors
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Vulnerability assessment guides fair and effective planning
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Protecting the vulnerable strengthens overall resilience
Lesson Conclusion
Vulnerability assessment is at the heart of people-centered Disaster Risk Management. It shifts attention from hazards alone to the real lives and conditions of people at risk. By understanding who is most vulnerable and why, disaster planners can design inclusive, effective, and ethical interventions. Reducing vulnerability not only saves lives during disasters but also promotes dignity, equality, and sustainable development. Strong disaster risk management begins by protecting those who need it most.
Lesson Objectives
the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
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Explain what capacity means in Disaster Risk Management
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Identify different types of capacities within a community or institution
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Understand why capacity is as important as vulnerability
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Conduct a simple but effective capacity assessment
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Use capacity information to reduce disaster risk and strengthen resilience
Lesson Introduction
In Disaster Risk Management, much attention is often given to hazards and vulnerabilities. While these are important, focusing only on problems creates a negative picture. Communities are not just vulnerable — they also have strengths, skills, and resources. These strengths are known as capacities.
Capacity assessment helps answer a powerful question:
What resources already exist that can reduce disaster risk and support recovery?
Understanding capacity shifts disaster management from dependency to empowerment. It helps communities recognize that they are not helpless victims but active actors in managing risk.
What Is Capacity?
Capacity refers to the abilities, skills, resources, knowledge, and systems that people, communities, or institutions can use to anticipate, cope with, respond to, and recover from disasters.
Capacity exists at different levels:
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Individual level
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Community level
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Institutional level
Important point:
👉 Capacity does not mean having everything needed. It means using what is available effectively.
Types of Capacity
Understanding different types of capacity helps conduct a complete assessment.
1. Human Capacity
This includes:
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Skills and knowledge
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Experience with past disasters
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Trained volunteers
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Health workers, teachers, artisans
Example:
A community with trained first aid volunteers has strong human capacity.
2. Social Capacity
This includes:
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Community groups and networks
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Traditional leadership
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Trust and cooperation among members
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Women’s groups, youth clubs, savings groups
Strong social relationships help communities respond quickly and support one another during emergencies.
3. Physical Capacity
This includes:
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Safe buildings and shelters
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Roads and bridges
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Water points and sanitation facilities
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Boats, vehicles, tools
Example:
A school building that can be used as an evacuation shelter is an important physical capacity.
4. Economic Capacity
This includes:
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Savings
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Livelihood diversity
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Access to credit or insurance
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Local businesses
Economic capacity determines how fast households can recover after a disaster.
5. Institutional Capacity
This includes:
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Local disaster committees
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Health centers and schools
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Early warning systems
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Local government support
Strong institutions improve coordination and decision-making during crises.
Why Capacity Assessment Is Important
Capacity assessment helps to:
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Build on existing strengths
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Reduce dependency on external aid
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Improve disaster preparedness and response
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Design realistic and sustainable plans
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Promote dignity and local ownership
Without capacity assessment, disaster programs often ignore local solutions and fail to last.
Steps in Conducting a Capacity Assessment
Step 1: Identify Existing Resources
Through community discussions, list:
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Skills
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Equipment
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Institutions
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Local practices
Step 2: Analyze How Capacities Are Used
Ask:
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Are these resources accessible during disasters?
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Who controls them?
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Are they reliable?
Step 3: Identify Capacity Gaps
Compare existing capacities with risks to see what is missing and needs strengthening.
Real-Life Community Example
In a flood-prone area:
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Human capacity: trained community volunteers
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Social capacity: strong village committee
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Physical capacity: boats and elevated buildings
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Institutional capacity: early warning messages
Result:
Flood impacts are reduced, and evacuation is faster and safer.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Ignoring informal or traditional capacities
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Focusing only on external support
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Assuming poor communities have no capacity
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Not updating capacity assessments
Practical Exercise
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Choose a community or institution you know
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List three existing capacities
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Identify one capacity gap
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Suggest one action to strengthen capacity
Key Takeaways
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Capacity reduces disaster risk
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Communities have valuable strengths
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Capacity assessment promotes resilience
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Using local resources improves sustainability
Lesson Conclusion
Capacity assessment is a powerful tool that changes how disaster risk is understood and managed. It highlights what communities already have, not only what they lack. By identifying and strengthening existing capacities, Disaster Risk Management becomes more effective, inclusive, and sustainable. When capacity is recognized and supported, communities move from vulnerability toward resilience, confidence, and self-reliance.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
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Explain what risk ranking and prioritization mean in Disaster Risk Management
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Analyze hazards based on their likelihood and potential impact
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Use practical methods to rank risks in communities or organizations
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Identify which risks require immediate attention and resources
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Apply risk prioritization to improve planning, preparedness, and resilience
Lesson Introduction
Disaster Risk Management involves many hazards, vulnerabilities, and capacities. Communities often face multiple risks at the same time — floods, droughts, fires, disease outbreaks, or landslides. Not all risks can be addressed immediately due to limited resources. This is where risk ranking and prioritization becomes critical.
Risk ranking allows communities, governments, and organizations to focus on the most serious risks first. It ensures resources are used wisely, interventions are targeted, and actions are both effective and sustainable.
What Is Risk Ranking and Prioritization?
Risk ranking is the process of evaluating hazards and risks based on their likelihood (how often they occur) and their potential impact (how much harm they can cause).
Risk prioritization uses this ranking to decide which risks need immediate attention and which can be managed over time.
Simply put:
“Not all risks are equal. Some need urgent action; others can wait.”
Why Risk Ranking Matters
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Resources are limited, especially in developing countries
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Some hazards cause more damage or affect more people
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Prioritization prevents wasted efforts on minor risks
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It ensures high-risk groups are protected first
Example:
A community may face both minor windstorms and seasonal flooding. Windstorms may happen often but cause little damage, while floods happen less often but destroy homes and livelihoods. By ranking risks, the community focuses first on flood preparedness, then addresses windstorm mitigation.
Steps in Risk Ranking and Prioritization
Step 1: List All Identified Risks
Use results from hazard identification, vulnerability assessment, and capacity assessment. Include all potential hazards and threats.
Step 2: Assess Likelihood
Determine how likely each risk is to occur:
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Rare (once in 10+ years)
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Occasional (every 2–10 years)
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Frequent (annually or more)
Step 3: Assess Impact
Determine how severe the consequences could be:
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Low (minor property damage, no deaths)
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Medium (property damage, some injuries)
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High (major destruction, loss of life)
Step 4: Rank Risks
Combine likelihood and impact using a simple table or matrix:
| Likelihood ↓ / Impact → | Low | Medium | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare | Low | Low | Medium |
| Occasional | Low | Medium | High |
| Frequent | Medium | High | High |
This helps visually identify the highest priority risks.
Step 5: Prioritize Actions
Focus resources on high likelihood & high impact hazards first. Medium risks come next, while low risks may be monitored.
Practical Community Example
A riverside community identifies hazards:
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Floods: occasional, high impact → high priority
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Disease outbreak: occasional, medium impact → medium priority
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Windstorms: frequent, low impact → low priority
Result:
Flood early warnings, evacuation plans, and raised houses are prioritized. Disease awareness campaigns follow. Windstorm measures are monitored but do not consume major resources.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Ignoring community input in ranking
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Using only past experiences without considering new hazards
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Overlooking vulnerable groups when assessing impact
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Treating all risks as equally urgent
Practical Exercise
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Take a real community or organization you know
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List three major hazards
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Assess their likelihood and impact
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Rank them from highest to lowest priority
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Suggest one immediate action for the top risk
Key Takeaways
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Risk ranking helps focus on hazards that matter most
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Likelihood and impact determine priority
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Resources must be directed toward high-priority risks
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Involving the community improves accuracy and ownership
Lesson Conclusion
Risk ranking and prioritization turn raw disaster information into actionable plans. By focusing on the most dangerous and likely hazards first, communities and organizations save lives, protect livelihoods, and use resources efficiently. This process transforms Disaster Risk Management from reactive responses into strategic, proactive, and life-saving action. When risks are correctly ranked and prioritized, disasters become manageable, not overwhelming.
This is helpful
ReplyDeleteVery powerful
ReplyDeleteDay 2 well done Sir!zikunveka ndithu.
ReplyDeleteThis is helpful, keep up the good work
ReplyDeleteWe are really following sir
ReplyDeleteHow do we check the credibility of information we get from the local leaders/community leaders?
ReplyDeleteI ask because I have seen that most people don't give out information for free.
Thanks
It often happens when the Community engagement steps were missed or the one facilitating did not clearly explain the object , Communities will not share their information to someone they dont trust.
DeleteZilibwino kwambiri
ReplyDeleteI have enjoyed the lesson, mainly on Community Risk Assessment..
ReplyDeleteFollowing with keen interest, congrats
ReplyDeleteThanks
ReplyDeleteWell explained, loud and clear
ReplyDeleteYou shared consolidated notes yesterday in case you have overlooked it today
ReplyDeleteVery helpful program
ReplyDeleteThis is helpful sir,,well done
ReplyDeleteThe delivery wow so great
ReplyDeletePliz we provide some soft copy documents
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed
ReplyDeleteNice one thanks
ReplyDeleteWell explained, and simple summary notes
ReplyDeleteVery clear and vivid
ReplyDelete1. Could community sensitization be regarded as non structural measures?
ReplyDelete2. If possible, the pictures being sent should be numbered so that as you explain we should all be aware of the picture you are referring to.