Loading...
Accessibility menu

Content for the offcanvas goes here. You can place just about any Bootstrap component or custom elements here.

Photo: UN Women

Conference session

Governance and inclusive early warnings

This MHEWS-III Conference session is organised by UNDP, UNDRR & others and supported by UN Women

This MHEWS-III Conference session is led by UNDP, UNDRR, ITU, WFP, UNESCO-IOC, FAO, ANTICIPATION HUB, Water YOUTH NETWORK, NRC, WMO; and supported by UN Women. It will be held on Mon 23 May, 14:00-15:40 (Bali time).

Purpose

Early-warning systems enable communities, businesses, managers of services, and facilities (e.g., schools, health facilities, or dams.) to better understand the risks and hazards they face and take action to protect themselves, their assets and services in the event of an oncoming crisis, saving lives and livelihoods, and minimizing disruptions. In order to fulfill their purpose, early warning systems need to reach the population at large and multiple end-users, including vulnerable groups such as persons with disabilities, the elderly, and low literacy and linguistic minorities, providing different groups and users with actionable information relevant to their realities.  These people are often excluded from decision-making processes within local and national systems and governance arrangements, and as a result, they experience unequal access, their needs are not always adequately met and they are not enabled to take preventative action.

Overarching governance framework for people-centered multi-hazard early warning systems are essential to driving effective and inclusive early warning systems. Good governance frameworks clarify roles and responsibilities across the key components of early warning systems and should enable transparency, equity and inclusiveness, coherence, responsiveness, effectiveness and efficiency, and accountability for results.

The purpose of the session is to explore how policy, legal and regulatory frameworks and institutional arrangements might best be developed to support the inclusive multi-hazard early warning systems of tomorrow. The session will examine through first-hand experience how we currently implement inclusive governance with regard to early warning systems. A number of speakers from local communities, National Disaster Management Agencies (NDMAs), Meteorological Agencies, and governmental institutions will share current processes, best practices, and challenges from their experience in the field of inclusive early warning and early action. Building upon this and through a collaborative process, the session will then explore what the early warning and early action systems of tomorrow might look like and how these systems can be enhanced through inclusive governance.  

Key Result 

  • Review the current state of governance arrangements for inclusive multi-hazard early warning-early action systems. 

  • Identify pathways for enhancing inclusive governance for people-centered effective early warning and early action systems. 


Top