Compartir en

Plazo
31 Ago 2013
El registro está cerrado.

CIFAL Jeju- Developing Capacities on Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction in the Asia-Pacific Region

Tipo
Workshop
Ubicación
Jeju, Republic of Korea, República de Corea
Fecha
-
Duración
3 Days
Área del programa
Local Development
Precio
0,00 US$
Correo Electrónico del Centro de Coordinación del Evento
cifaljeju.jitc.1@gmail.com
Inscripción
By application & selection
Tipo de aprendizaje
Face-to-Face
Idioma(s)
English
Protección de Datos y Privacidad
Los datos personales de los participantes que solicitan, se registran o participan en los cursos y otros eventos de UNITAR se rigen por la Política de Privacidad y Protección de Datos. Al solicitar, registrarse o participar en este evento, el participante reconoce que conoce dicha política y aceptan sus condiciones.

Over the past 20 years disasters have affected 4.4 billion people, caused USD 2 trillion of damage and killed 1.3 million people. Natural disasters affected people living in developing countries and the most vulnerable communities within those countries. Over 95 percent of people killed by natural disasters are from developing countries. The Asia-Pacific is the world’s most vulnerable region when it comes to natural disasters. According to the World Disaster Report released by International Federation of the Red Crescent, as many as 85 percent of the people reported affected by disasters belonged to Asia-Pacific Region in the period 2000-2009. In this regard, building resilience and adapting to climate change is crucial for cities especially those in the Asia-Pacific region. Efforts to build resilience in cities can benefit from integrating climate change adaptation with existing efforts in disaster risk reduction (DRR) and other similar planning processes. A resilient city is one that is able to adapt to disaster and climate impacts now and in the future, thereby limiting the magnitude and severity of those impacts.

This capacity building training workshop, while promoting the importance of effective climate change adaptation (CCA) and disaster risk reduction, will provide: - An opportunity for countries in the Asia-pacific region to enhance capacities in climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction (DRR) - A platform to exchange in-depth learning from experts in the related area and to share good practices among participants - A venue for city-to-city cooperation in building resilience in cities by integrating disaster risk principles into local climate change adaptation plan

As a result of this workshop, participants will: - Understand the concept of climate change - Understand how climate change and disaster risk affect each other globally, regionally, and locally - Apply UNISDR-developed Local Government Self-Assessment Tool (LG-SAT) and UNITAR-developed CityShare methodology to rate and compare each other’s climate change adaptation policies and disaster risk reduction strategies for their local implementation - Understand the roles of local governments and other stakeholders in adaptation to climate change - Be able to find ways to cooperate with other participating cities

The workshop contents are composed of the following: - Introduction to Climate and Climate Change: The Basics - Climate Change and Disaster Risk as Global, Regional, and Local Threats - Integrating Disaster Reduction Principles in Our Own Action to Tackle Climate Change: Preparedness, Response, Recovery, and Reduction - Local and Regional Cooperation towards ‘Global Resilient Cities’ - Republic of Korea’s National Climate Change Adaptation Master Plan - A review of challenges and lessons learned in implementing policies Structure: The workshop structure consists of the following five pillars: - Keynote presentations and participatory discussion - UNISDR LG-SAT and group discussion - Overview of good practices, key challenges, and lessons learned - UNITAR CityShare methodology - Site visit

High-level authorities and experts from local governments, representatives from NGO and community-based organizations, academic institutions, and other local actors within the Asia-pacific region.