1. Home
  2. Events
Training event

Disaster recovery for all

Propose an edit Upload your content
Format
In person
Event language(s)
  • English
Date

Time

9.00am GMT+10

About

AIDR is offering this workshop for delegates seeking a deeper exploration of disaster recovery. We welcome all interested delegates, with anticipated interest from all levels of government, community organisations, agencies and researchers.

This interactive workshop will focus on bridging research and practice in disaster recovery. It will include multiple presentations, problem-solving through a recovery scenario, and identification of ways we can incorporate the last 50 years of research on recovery into practice. Together, these activities will increase understandings of the problems we may encounter when working in disaster recovery and ways of addressing them. There will be a particular focus on the ‘thorny’ problems in disaster recovery that are not straightforward to solve.

The session will be led by Dr Kate Brady, alongside guest contributors invited by AIDR for their deep expertise in recovery and community impacts. The workshop will include a mix of presentations, interactive exercises, breakout groups, and whole‑of‑group discussions.

What participants will learn

Delegates who attend this session will:

  • Gain an in depth understanding of key principles of disaster recovery
  • Understand interconnected disaster impacts that are relevant to working in recovery
  • Increase capacity to understand and work with others in multi-stakeholder recovery environments
  • Have the opportunity to network with delegates with similar interest in disaster recovery and collaboration to build resilience and reduce disaster risk
  • Understand ways of addressing ‘thorny’ issues in disaster recovery in cascading and compounding disasters
  • Build cross sector networks through structured collaboration and informal networking breaks.

Explore further

Themes Recovery

Please note: Content is displayed as last posted by a PreventionWeb community member or editor. The views expressed therein are not necessarily those of UNDRR, PreventionWeb, or its sponsors. See our terms of use