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Community based resilience building: normative meets narrative in Mbale, 2010 Prof David Jenkins, Dr John Kinuthia, Dr Linus Mofor, Prof Hilary Thomas, Marga Quince, Prof Abid Abu Tair and Richard F Okotel, PONT C2C PONT C2C • to build a more substantial base to support the work of PONT and other initiatives in East Africa; • to engage more broadly with MDG’s in Sub-Saharan Africa; • to develop a reputation for distinctive research and practice in sustainable community transformation; • to develop humanitarian engagement and advocacy in pursuit of the University’s corporate social responsibility mission; • to create an extensive network that accesses research and humanitarian resources on firm theoretical foundations. Synopsis • PONT and Community to Community Links • Resilience Building in Mbale + TACC • The normative – Kenya – Cameroon • The Bududa Story • Reflections PONT Mbale CAP • PONT- Mbale, a North-South, multi-stakeholder link • Friendship + • Partnership against poverty • We listen to multiple voices of community Forms of listening Resilience Initiatives • Seven hundred community based health volunteers trained and deployed • E&A function at Mbale Hospital • Launch of an ambulance service • Police and fire • District mapping TACC • The average number of ‘hot’ days per year in Uganda has increased by 74 (an additional 20.4% of days) between 1960 and 2003.1 1 UNDP Climate Change Country Profiles, 2008, Uganda C. McSweeney, M. New, and G. Lizcano TACC the main thrusts • Scaling up efforts to address climate change in 8 pilot regions: Mbale is one of the pilots • Implementing an Integrated Territorial Climate Plan (ITCP) • Quick wins • Investment plan for adaptation and mitigation initiatives Mbale Region • District Development Plans • District Environment Action Plans • Sustainable Development Workshop • Sustainable Development Action Plan • Advocacy role with WAG, NRG4SD, UNDP Sironko District Nam agu m ba Nakaloke Nakaloke Namunsi Nam anyonyi Aisa Namagum ba Namabasa Pallisa Nkom a Kam a Bumuluya Nabweya Jewa Masaba Tsabanyanya Ma luk hu Bumboi Mooni Bukasakya Bum utoto Kirayi Bufumbo Lwass o Bungokho-Mutoto Bum ageni Bulweta Bukonde Namatala Bubyangu Budwale Bumadanda W anale Bubens tye Bungokho Busano Busano Bubirabi Bukhum wa Buyaka Bum bobi Bunam butye Bu m as ik ye Busoba Buruk uru Bu nas h im olo Bunani mi Bufukhula Busiu Bukyiende Bunam butye Bum uts opa Bum as ikye Namawanga Tororo D istrict Manafwa District Early Phases • Preliminary phase – developing the partnership – – – – Instigating partnership Scoping mission Development and approval of project document Inception Workshop • Foundation phase – capacity building – Capacity needs assessment and capacity building – Quick-win, small scale projects using existing grant schemes – Legal, financial, environmental training for leaders and focal persons • Preparation of the Integrated Territorial Climate Plan – – – – – Data collection to provide an environmental profile Regional development priorities and carbon budgeting Data analysis to discover vulnerabilities and potential impacts of climate change Consideration of appropriate mitigation and adaptation options Development of action plan with associated implementation, investment and M and E plans Low impact, high frequency, localised disasters Community based responses NORMATIVE APPROACHES Sub Hyogo The development of normative approaches to the problems identified in Kenya, Cameroon and Uganda appears as both ethical and rational Trickle down... The promise of the normative Cameroon and Kenya “The establishment of a bottom up focussed hierarchy for dealing with disasters should make the work of international response more effective, faster and better targeted at community objectives.” Critique of a normative view? • The idea that the normative alters practice is an hypothesis, not an axiom. (Flyvbjerg) • The normative is vulnerable to manipulation by power. • Beware rationality-asrationalization (after Foucauld) • Normative models can be overwhelming and lead to paralysis. They conjure up the notion that only the sophisticated (westerner, professional, expert, official) can do this. • Whose values inform the normative? • Needs analysis... A deficit model versus ABCD The point of a narrative view? Inter alia • Reveal departures from the normative • Disclose inadequacies within the normative • Identify the Realrationalität • Not arbitrators but facilitators • [a] man (sic) who neglects what is actually done for what should be done learns the way to selfdestruction Landslides at Bududa Bududa, St David’s Day 2010 Bududa This event killed over 300 people and led to the temporary displacement of as many as 8,000 and the permanent displacement of an undisclosed number. Meteorologist s suggest that extreme weather conditions in southern Europe weakened the high pressure systems in north Africa, which in turn pushed the rain belt down to Uganda. The area is densely populated: 6 times the national average. Deforestation has occurred at an alarming rate: every square metre is farmed. Source: Advanced Land Imager NASA’s (EO-1) Sat Relief Operation Co-ordinated by URCS for the Office of the Prime Minister and the District Disaster Management Committee Inadequate latrines; lack of psychosocial counsellors Hearing the voice of survivors “... many harder situations await when relief is gone.” Whither Resilience? • Mary Goretti Kitutu, the environmental information systems specialist at the National Environment Management Authority, said the Government has to compel people in the landslide-prone areas to plant forests. • Dr. Festus Bagoora, an expert on weathering and land formations at the Department of Geography at Makerere University “recommended the relocation of people (living) in areas they considered to be more prone to floods and landslides.” Dominant narrative relocation • To avoid such tragedies in future, especially on the heavily degraded slopes, the government planned to permanently relocate and resettle the survivors in a new area. • The LCV “...scoffed at people who he said wanted to benefit from the tragedy by sabotaging the resettlement plan. He said that government should investigate such persons and that disciplinary action should be taken if any are found culpable of wrong doing.” • “People who were initially resisting were first to load their property on the trucks,” said a Disaster Management Officer in the Office of the Prime Minister. BUDUDA LANDSLIDE SURVIVORS GET NEW HOME IN KIRYANDONGO The case for community • The repeated failure of governments to intervene and plan • The ineffectuality of the normative • The localised nature of the risks etc • “To empower the local communities and enable them to have a stake in the management of the environment and natural resources.” • But is there a case that goes beyond the pragmatic? The imperative of community Shared rationality “... One cannot think for oneself if one thinks entirely by oneself... It is only by participation in rational practice-based community that one becomes rational...” Whose justice? Which rationality? 1988 Alasdair MacIntyre The imperative of community Dependent Rational Animals (1999) MacIntyre shows how networks of giving and receiving provide the environments in which we can develop as independent rational animals and further develop rationality in community Virtue ethics Alasdair MacIntyre Hypothesis • Resilience is about adaptive not allocative efficiency • Resilience in communities requires virtues of acknowledged dependence Questions • • • • “To what extent are shared virtues of acknowledged dependence practiced?” “What communities are demonstrating high/ low adaptability? What values do they share/ lack?” “What are the ethical drivers of existing paradigms? Where do they fail?” “What values underpin extant power relations? Is this good for the species? What alternatives are there?” Thank you © david jenkins