Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education

The possible impacts of the level of formal education on different aspects of disaster management, prevention, alarm, emergency, or postdisaster activities, were studied in a comparative perspective for three countries with a comparable exposure to hurricane hazards but different capacities for prev...

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Main Authors: Adelheid Pichler, Erich Striessnig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013-09-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss3/art31/
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spelling doaj-64f8036edd654bbe8de6f316525424eb2020-11-25T00:32:41ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872013-09-011833110.5751/ES-05774-1803315774Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of EducationAdelheid Pichler0Erich Striessnig1University of ViennaWittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID, WU), Vienna University of Economics and BusinessThe possible impacts of the level of formal education on different aspects of disaster management, prevention, alarm, emergency, or postdisaster activities, were studied in a comparative perspective for three countries with a comparable exposure to hurricane hazards but different capacities for preventing harm. The study focused on the role of formal education in reducing vulnerability operating through a long-term learning process and put particular emphasis on the education of women. The comparative statistical analysis of the three countries was complemented through qualitative studies in Cuba and the Dominican Republic collected in 2010-2011. We also analyzed to what degree targeted efforts to reduce vulnerability were interconnected with other policy domains, including education and science, health, national defense, regional development, and cultural factors. We found that better education in the population had clear short-term effects on reducing vulnerability through awareness about crucial information, faster and more efficient responses to alerts, and better postdisaster recuperation. However, there were also important longer term effects of educational efforts to reduce social vulnerability through the empowerment of women, its effect on the quality of institutions and social networks for mutual assistance creating a general culture of safety and preparedness. Not surprisingly, on all three accounts Cuba clearly did the best; whereas Haiti was worst, and the Dominican Republic took an intermediate position.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss3/art31/adaptive capacitiesCaribbeaneducationvulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adelheid Pichler
Erich Striessnig
spellingShingle Adelheid Pichler
Erich Striessnig
Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
Ecology and Society
adaptive capacities
Caribbean
education
vulnerability
author_facet Adelheid Pichler
Erich Striessnig
author_sort Adelheid Pichler
title Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
title_short Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
title_full Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
title_fullStr Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
title_full_unstemmed Differential Vulnerability to Hurricanes in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic: The Contribution of Education
title_sort differential vulnerability to hurricanes in cuba, haiti, and the dominican republic: the contribution of education
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2013-09-01
description The possible impacts of the level of formal education on different aspects of disaster management, prevention, alarm, emergency, or postdisaster activities, were studied in a comparative perspective for three countries with a comparable exposure to hurricane hazards but different capacities for preventing harm. The study focused on the role of formal education in reducing vulnerability operating through a long-term learning process and put particular emphasis on the education of women. The comparative statistical analysis of the three countries was complemented through qualitative studies in Cuba and the Dominican Republic collected in 2010-2011. We also analyzed to what degree targeted efforts to reduce vulnerability were interconnected with other policy domains, including education and science, health, national defense, regional development, and cultural factors. We found that better education in the population had clear short-term effects on reducing vulnerability through awareness about crucial information, faster and more efficient responses to alerts, and better postdisaster recuperation. However, there were also important longer term effects of educational efforts to reduce social vulnerability through the empowerment of women, its effect on the quality of institutions and social networks for mutual assistance creating a general culture of safety and preparedness. Not surprisingly, on all three accounts Cuba clearly did the best; whereas Haiti was worst, and the Dominican Republic took an intermediate position.
topic adaptive capacities
Caribbean
education
vulnerability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss3/art31/
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