Four Talks on Disaster Risk Reduction, no. 4
Disasters, Resilience and the Tension of Opposites
The word resilience,
or resiliency, has a 500-year history in the English language. It stems
from the Latin verb resilire, 'to recoil' or rebound. The first
scientific use of the term occurred in the Edwardian era slightly more than a
century ago, when it was applied in mechanics. A resilient material is one
that, under an applied force, reacts with an optimum combination of strength
and ductility. The strength enables it to resist the force and the ductility to
deform in order to absorb some of the stress that is applied.
In the 1960s
resiliency was first used to describe ecological systems that could resist
shocks to their equilibrium. The term was applied in the sense of formal
systems analysis. Twenty-five years later the concept came into common use in
psychology, with particular reference to the ability of children to survive the
trauma of conflict, disaster or family strife.
Resiliency became
fashionable in disaster risk reduction only in the mid-2000s. By analogy with
mechanics, a resilient society is one that is strong enough to resist the shock
effect of disaster and flexible enough to adapt to those aspects that cannot be
repulsed. The idea draws upon both the long tradition of building structural
protection against natural disasters (dams, levees, anti-seismic housing, and
so on) and 90 years of human ecological studies on how people and societies
adapt to hazards.
One common
misassumption about resiliency is that it simply means 'to bounce back', in the
sense of recreating the conditions that prevailed before disaster struck. A
much better idea is to "build back better", in which disaster becomes
the opportunity to improve conditions beyond what they were before. In many
parts of the world this is an imperative, and one hopes that disaster is not a
brake on development, but the opportunity to further it by introducing more
functional plans, better initiatives for renewal and an augmented culture of
safety. One also hopes that this is is the case, not only in terms of physical
protection, but also with respect to social and institutional development.
Gradually, the
erosion of boundaries between disciplines and professions has led to a
consensus that the answers to the problems posed by disasters need to be
holistic. The sectoral approach has often created more problems than it has
solved, for example, by encouraging development behind structural barriers that
fail to offer adequate protection against floods, landslides, avalanches or
tsunamis—in fact no structural measures ever offer 100 per cent protection.
Indeed, without a holistic approach that develops measures in a variety of
structural and non-structural domains, there may be a risk transfer effect, but
not of the mutually beneficial kind. More likely it will transfer risk from
where it is tractable to where it is intractable or cannot so easily be
sustained.
Indeed, one of the
most common forms of risk transfer involves the marginalisation of the poor and
dispossessed. All evidence points to the fact that disasters tend to strengthen
pre-existing power structures. Once the 'therapeutic community' of welfare and
mutual assistance has evaporated, the social milieu that emerges tends to be a
version of what was there before that exaggerates its own defects. For
instance, after the December 1972 earthquake in Nicaragua, the rich and middle
classes rebuilt their damaged property in six months: some of the poor and
marginalised people of the city never rebuilt their homes at all. Hence,
disasters are seldom about empowerment, even though they ought to be. They
weaken the weak and strengthen the hand of the strong. In the Caribbean, for
example, Hurricane Mitch set back development in some areas by twenty years,
and it left plantation workers destitute as their employers switched production
elsewhere and offered them no safety net. What was mere inconvenience to a
multinational company was devastating to its employees.
It should be apparent
from this discussion, and from much of what one reads about disaster, that it
is a thing of light and shade. Indeed, the tension of opposites, the
chiaroscuro of disaster, dominates the whole field. This is hardly a new
predicament. In fact, perhaps without being aware of it, we still use the
ancient Platonic notions of generatio and corruptio, creation and
destruction. The Greeks had intended them primarily as expressions of
small-scale cycles, by which, for example, mountains were elevated and their
rocks gradually shattered and scoured away by erosion. Indeed, they saw the
world as continuously locked in the dialectic of creation and destruction. The
Mediæval thinker, on the other hand, was apt to impose a beginning and an end
to the great cycles, and hence generatio gradually became equated with
Genesis, and corruptio with the Day of Judgement and the ensuing
extinction of the world in a final conflagration. Greeks who had been sceptical
of Plato had interpreted his magnus annus (or Great Year) in this way,
as one phase of growth and decay encompassing all life and human existence.
Despite our different
perspective in the 21st century, that tension of opposites, generatio and
corruptio, remains a part of our outlook.
In fact, sometimes
the ancient Greek thinkers seem quintessentially modern. Consider, for example,
Anaximander of Miletus, whose dates were
615 to 547 BCE. By a process of dispassionate observation of the world
around him he raised the great questions: what is nature? What is the source of
the confusion and change that we see around us, and how are we to reconcile it
with the concept of eternal and absolute order? Almost 2,600 years later, if we
knew the answers to these questions sufficiently well, we would probably know
enough to bring the disasters problem fully under control.
Instead, we live in
the New Baroque Era. True, history does not repeat itself, but it does make
some close passes with respect to how it once was. The old Baroque period was
distinguished by the tension of opposites. In Europe, the Ancien Régime began
to crumble under the duress of technological and social change. Old certainties
began to disappear. The 21st century has its absolutism, its barbarism and its
perplexities, too. In both periods we can discern a struggle to come to terms
with the rapidly shifting foundations of society.
I was much struck by
the parallels between the Lisbon earthquake of November 1755 and the attacks on
the United States in September 2001. In both cases, the heart of a great
trading empire was suddenly, unexpectedly struck a cataclysmic, death-dealing
blow on a calm, sunny morning. Even the visual parallels are striking: lofty
buildings, with their repetitive fenestration, suddenly brought down, towers
decapitated, dust plumes and crackling fires that consumed the wreckage. I have
written in detail about the philosophical, social and symbolic similarities
between the two disasters (see Disasters journal, 2002). Suffice it to
say that in each case the shockwaves rippled out across society and led to
consequences far beyond their points of origin—in time, in geography and in
form of socio-economic mutation.
The Lisbon earthquake
is widely held to have ushered in a darker period of history, in which the
optimism of the Enlightenment was replaced by a black pessimism about the human
condition and the future of society. Most probably, one cannot generalise so
readily, such are the many points of view that need to be taken into account.
However, continuing the parallel with modern times, it is true that there was a
resurgence of militarism after the 2001 disasters, and one that could be
directly connected to them. The attitude after Lisbon, when the human
experience was suddenly revealed to be malevolent, was perhaps yet more
authoritarian.
This brings be on to
one of my favourite topics: the difference between civil defence and civil
protection. The terms are often employed loosely. For example, the civil
protection service of New Zealand is the Ministry of Civil Defence and
Emergency Management. However, I believe it is useful and necessary to
distinguish between the two forms of organisation. Civil defence, in its purest
form, is a centralised, national, top-down service that is designed to protect
a country against armed aggression. Originally, this was by other states, but
latterly it has been practised by loosely organised ideological groups,
possibly with state backing (one should not underestimate the importance in the
modern era of proxy wars, however "asymmetric" they may be). Civil
protection, sensu stricto, is a bottom-up, locally organised, federated
system designed to protect the civilian population against natural and
technological disasters. Some countries, for example Italy, have both systems
clearly delineated, and in such cases they tend to complement, rather than
conflict, with one another.
In organising a
country or region to fight disasters (both in terms of crisis response and risk
reduction), there is usually a gradual transition from military to civilian
models. Information and communications technology is widely employed nowadays,
and one of its effects is to flatten the chain of command. It is clear,
moreover, that civil protection works best when it is allied with participatory
governance.
Now according to the
dictionary, 'governance' is nothing more than "the act of governing".
However, for the term to mean anything in the context of disaster risk
reduction, it must signify a common social process: representative democracy,
but probably also a substantial dose of participatory democracy. One reason is
that we need to induce people to assume more of their own risks (allowing for
welfare, which I will discuss shortly), and another is that what is done to
protect society needs to be based on approval by consensus.
From the Lisbon
earthquake of 1755 to the San Francisco tremors and urban fire of 1906,
citizens were summarily executed if they did not do what the authorities
thought they should do. Authoritarianism in disaster aftermaths has not disappeared:
indeed, leaders with strong personalities see it as an easy fix to complex
problems—giving people a dose of what they need, whether or not they want it.
However, in the last twenty or thirty years there has been much more discussion
of ethics and equity than before, and the spotlight of instant publicity has
fostered this trend.
At this point I think
I might open a parenthesis by asking which was the first "modern"
disaster? There are, of course, varying interpretations of this, and I can only
offer the one that I favour. It was the Nigerian civil war of 1967-70,
sometimes known as the Biafra war. A quite artificial famine was induced in the
Nigerian state of Biafra as part of a 'scorched earth' policy against the
rebels. This was the first time that television cameras reached the area during
the crisis phase, filmed the human suffering in the raw and, with some
ingenuity, played the footage on television news within a matter of hours. It
was not real-time broadcasting, but it was a breakthrough that led inexorably
to exactly that.
I might add that
civil defence, in its modern form, probably began one morning in April 1937 at
the Battle of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War. It was the first concerted
aerial bombardment in history. It may well have been the tipping point at which
warfare started to reap a greater toll among civilians (particularly women and
children) than among soldiers, which it now routinely does. The rudimentary
attempts to protect the civilian population on the ground were to grow to
fully-fledged systems of civil defence a few years later during the Second
World War.
Origins apart, civil
defence was the progenitor of civil protection. Hence it is tempting, and
perhaps legitimate, to think in terms of an evolutionary process from one to
the other. Is civil defence, perhaps, the darker reality and civil protection a
more optimistic one in terms of the human condition? Is such an interpretation
justified in terms of social, organisational and institutional evolution? Does
evolution of any kind naturally bring us to a happier, more adjusted state? In
this case, perhaps: civil defence is, after all, linked to warfare and
conflict, while the raw material—more properly the core material—of civil protection tends to be a more morally neutral
set of phenomena associated with natural disasters and unanticipated failures
of technology. It is also the defence of civic values against any enemy,
whether morally neutral or not.
"Man's
inhumanity to man / Makes countless thousands mourn!" wrote Robert Burns
in 1785. In that sense, it was inevitable that civil defence would never go
away. Indeed, it could be regarded as the ethical face of warfare. Or could it?
The civil defence of
the 1940s was an affair of tin hats and gas masks in canvas bags. Its
operatives pulled survivors from the rubble of bomb-sites and found them makeshift
accommodation. As the War was ending, the term 'iron curtain' was already being
used to describe a situation that would vastly intensify once the threat of
all-out nuclear conflict was fully appreciated. Civil defence in the post-War
period was dominated by a series of preparations that were increasingly and
demonstrably futile. If populations could survive nuclear war, what sort of
world would they emerge into? Would there be a food chain at all? Would
radioactive contamination wipe them out, person by person? Would the state have
protected its people or only its élite? Would it have used civil defence to
protect the élite against the people? We will never know, but there will
always be doubts about the motives inherent in civil defence during the Cold
War. In most countries it was a very secretive affair, and secrecy does not
breed trust.
The fall of the
Berlin Wall in 1989 was one of the most symbolic moments in modern history. It
led to a lapse in civil defence that, however, was anything but permanent.
Evidence of this can be seen in the fact that the so-called "peace
dividend", the economic "beating of swords into ploughshares",
lasted only until about 1994. Terrorism has conveniently provided a new Cold
War. In part this is justified by the mutation of proxy wars (as practised
previously in Afghanistan and Africa, for instance) into proxy-based asymmetric
conflict (as practised, once again, in Afghanistan, and also the Middle East
and Asia, and periodically imported into the West). For the rest it represents
the resurgence and reassertion of the cold warriors after their brief period in
the wilderness.
Clausewitz regarded
war as "politics carried on by other means". I would prefer to see it
as economics, rather than politics, "carried on by other means". Its
fuel is the military-industrial complex (and in this respect it is notable that
the global armaments industry has not suffered from the recession that has so
deeply affected virtually every other sector of production). Let me correct
myself: it is a military-industrial-academic complex, because many people in
the universities are seduced by the opportunity to give it an intellectual
justification. They are the retailers of fear and anguish.
So was civil defence
reborn. Its first act was to suck up money in copious quantities. The links
between civil defence and civil protection vary from one country to another,
but, however they are configured, they are always joined at the hip by the
question of funding. Their interconnection brings me to another of my pet
interests: the relationship between centrism and devolution.
Civil defence is
necessarily based on the nation state. If time and space permitted, I would
launch a diatribe about that and the question of national identity (let me
declare my interest: I am a federalist and anti-nationalist). Rather than being
the natural state of human beings, nations are a relatively recent construct
that in less than half a millennium has contrived a temporary solution to the
questions of identity and citizenship. But the defence of the realm requires a
national approach, because in most countries that is where in the hierarchy the
armed forces, intelligence services and command structures are located.
In contrast, wherever
it is, civil protection needs local input. Failure to organise locally, failure
to support local solutions to local problems, and failure to take local
interests into account will result in the failure of civil protection.
Evidently, it needs to be harmonised at successively higher levels of
government, or otherwise there will not be enough interoperability. And civil
protection forces are moving ever further around the world's chess-board of disaster
responses. In this respect one of the recent trends has been to fuse
international with domestic disaster response in the interests of greater
efficiency (but it needs a radical overhaul of attitudes and training).
I have been a
regional government employee in two countries and have observed the local
response to threats, risks and hazards as it occurs and in a variety of
settings. I am convinced that it flourishes the most when it is given autonomy
(but perhaps also guidance and support). Herein lies the dilemma for most
national governments. Devolving power is a vote-getter, but after it has been
devolved, governments tend to regret their actions and want it back. This is
especially true if the intermediate and local levels of public administration
turn out to be pugnaciously independent.
If civil protection
is very poorly developed in a given place, once disaster strikes it will be
swept aside as aid, assistance and command lines are imported into the area.
Once these are withdrawn, as if they were the Roman legions marching back to
defend the centre of a collapsing empire, then the local response is doomed to
be the victim of its own ineffectiveness.
Local (and indeed
regional and national) administrators vary in their attitudes to disaster reduction
and response. This field suffers considerably from the "no votes in
sewage" syndrome. In other words, come what may, it has a negative
profile. Even the concepts of more safety and security don't seem to be
sufficiently positive to enthuse politicians in search of re-election (or not
unless there has very recently been a bad disaster in their precincts).
Moreover, politicians can avail themselves of the Great Gamble: that disaster
will not strike during their next term of office. As a result of the public's
lack of understanding of probabilities and the need to prepare for the worse in
"times of peace", they usually get away with it. If a disaster does
occur, many of them are adept at blaming the failure to prepare on someone
else.
Few nations can aspire
to the levels of rigour and honesty that prevail in Sweden. Having discovered,
amid great national scandal, that it did not have the capacity to manage the
Swedish aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, it set up a national agency
for civil protection. Due to lack of experience with this form of organisation,
it did not work well. The Swedes learnt fast—very fast indeed—and within months
had it reorganised and functioning well at all levels from Stockholm to the
provincial towns. No doubt Swedes who read this will, through familiarity with
defects to the system, pick holes in my description, but compared to other
countries I can assure them that they are making a counsel of perfection. And
the science and art of civil protection are both highly imprecise.
Now there are
countries, like France, where the administrative traditions are highly
centralised and are likely to remain so. They will have to find their own
solutions to the problem of local autonomy in the face of disasters. Let me
remind them that the opposite of such autonomy is, if I may borrow a bastard
term, assistentialism. By ironic reference to existentialism, this is
dependence on imported assistance. Once the source of that help dries up,
nothing is left but a dependence on something that is not there. It tends to
kill local initiative.
To watch other
countries deal with the problem of managing disasters and associated risks is
to chart the progress of a constant, often very dynamic, tension between
centrism and devolution. The latter solves problems, but it does so by
engendering the fear that things will get out of hand.
A subsidiary issue
connected with this tension between centrism and devolution is that of the dual
roles of imported and indigenous knowledge. Throughout this discussion, I use
the term 'imported' to mean "brought into the area in question", but
not necessarily across an international border. Imported technologies, know-how
and procedures are often vilified for their effect in depleting local autonomy
and making local communities dependent on extraneous ways of doing things that,
perhaps, they don't fully understand. This is often very true, most sadly, but
it would be wrong to glorify all indigenous knowledge, some of which is
positively toxic. For example, after the 1964 Great Alaskan Earthquake it was
reported that Inuit fishermen had a tradition which informed them that tsunamis
are composed of two waves. Many were drowned by the third wave, which was the
largest in the 1964 sequence. But now back to the primary distinction.
Theoretically, both
civil defence and civil protection are potential hand-maidens of revolution, or
at least of insurrection. In fact, in the politically polarised times of the
Cold War, with all their associated fears and suspicions, in places, civil
protection was actively prevented from developing, in case it led to a
coup d'êtat. This, of course, was when civil protection was seen as a
sub-military parallel to the armed forces.
Although few
generals, majors and colonels will admit it, military commanders often feel out
of their depth when dealing with disasters. Such events are a shadowy,
ambiguous form of enemy and many of the tactics used to deal with unruly
citizens can only be practised on the very people the armed forces are seeking
to protect. Hence the gradual 'civilianisation' of civil defence and its
transition into civil protection. When the leaders of the latter are no longer
military men but are trained women, we will have arrived. Many women have shown
extraordinary aptitude as disaster managers, although it is not yet clear
whether this is because they are naturally superior at the job to men or merely
because to make progress they are forced to compete in a male-dominated world.
I suspect the former.
So the tension of
opposites between civil defence and civil protection is likely to continue.
Civil protection does not do some of the things that civil defence does,
notably forensic analysis, surveillance and intelligence gathering. But civil
defence tends to be inept at managing natural disasters on the local level. The
military-industrial academic complex would have us believe that the threats
from extreme natural events are relatively stable, while those from terrorism
and unrest are growing dynamically. In reality it could be the other way
around, especially given the potential effects of climate change. True, the
momentous adaptations that a dynamic climate will require of human populations
will probably foment unrest, but is the solution civil defence, or is it
greater equity in the distribution of resources? And greater emphasis on the
stewardship of the resources we have?
One issue that arises
out of all of this is welfare. Strictly conceived, this is the provision of
assistance necessary for adequately decent living conditions to people who
cannot provide such a thing for themselves. Unfortunately, welfare has tended
to mutate into largesse, and this often has a political motivation behind it.
The effect of this has been to cheapen the concept and render it both
unworkable and unacceptable to society. Yet welfare will always be needed,
unless one subscribes to such a Darwinian view that one believes that social
misfits and losers in the great lottery of life should be callously abandoned
to their fate.
Hence, welfare needs
constantly to be redefined and reinvented. It should go hand in hand with the
sort of empowerment (big governance rather than big government) that enables
some people to avoid it. And we need to avoid attitudes to welfare that
resemble those of the Victorian moralists: properly conceived, it is neither a
social disease nor an intolerable burden on society.
Although it is not a
tension of opposites, resilience and sustainability need to be considered
together. The one is the other. Hence, the sustainability of disaster
risk reduction is the sustainability of lifestyles and livelihoods, and of the
Earth's carrying capacity. No technofix can ensure that, so the problem is
social and cultural, even emotional, as much as it is one of applying more and
more technology.
We have moved away
from the idea of the New Baroque Era and the tension of opposites. There are
many of these and I encourage those who have patiently followed this discussion
to seek and identify them. Is resilience the opposite of vulnerability, and is
the change in emphasis a useful switch from a negative to a more positive view
of disaster? Can we better solve the problem by adopting a "can-do"
approach, or must we first develop a better understanding of the sum total of
human suffering and misery.
To end these talks, I
pose the question, what comes after resilience? Like everyone else I don't
know, and I have no crystal ball that reveals the future to me. Like all
committed scientists and citizens, I have tried to follow the trends, and
reflect on where they are taking us. So I leave you with a possible clue:
perhaps the tension is between fragility and hardening. And I leave you to work
out what that might mean for disaster risk reduction. Thank you for your
attention.