CRISIS is the new normal. In a world increasingly under pressure from different shocks - the effects of trade and labour movement in today’s globalised world, repercussions from climate change, financial crises and urbanisation related pressures, our economies, communities and ecosystems are constantly facing repeated stress.
The devastating Ebola outbreak in 2015
that tested global health systems, the earthquake in northern Tanzania
in 2016, floods in Lilongwe, Johannesburg and Accra that brought cities
and their economies to a halt, are examples of the relentless pace and
nature of such disruptions.
Closer to home, low rainfall levels in
Kenya in 2016 were a harbinger of the current drought. Food and water
insecurity in arid and semiarid regions have resulted in livestock
deaths, crop failure, inter-community tensions and school closures.
Concurrently, in Tanzania, floods
wreaked havoc and death in Morogoro, Katavi and Dar es Salaam regions in
early 2017. If this is indeed our new normal, the question is how can
we be better prepared for the inevitable? As a start we need to deploy
approaches in the same way business is done.
Defining our future by planning
strategically, and doing so early with a long term vision anchored
firmly in execution. In other words, we need to invest in a resilience
approach.
But what is resilience in practice?
Resilience is the capacity of individuals, communities and systems to
survive, adapt, and grow in the face of stress and shocks, and even
transform when conditions require it.
Building resilience is about making
people, communities and systems better prepared to withstand
catastrophic events – both natural and man made—and able to bounce back
more quickly and emerge stronger from these shocks and stresses.
Definitions however, take us only so
far, as there is need to understand what resilience looks like in a
practical sense – what is useful to invest in or how policy needs to be
shaped in order to respond in a new way.
Late last year, The Rockefeller
Foundation convened stakeholders from 17 countries in Nairobi for its
2016 Resilience Week. Practitioners from across the globe sought to
learn and share new tools and methodologies to advance resilience, and
surface opportunities for policy and financial investment.
Investments that would lead to a more
resilient Africa. The convening focused on the need to identify
strategies that can help sustain, but more importantly protect Africa’s
hard won progress.
Discussions revealed key lessons needed
to take resilience forward from the field of theory, into practice.
Resilience is a learned behavior, not an innate characteristic,
therefore people and economies can learn and embed this approach into
existing systems.
Mindsets and approaches need to be
changed in order to embed resilience in development and economic
strategies, in order to forestall the need for humanitarian assistance
when disasters do strike as investments, both financial and physical can
be significantly wiped out by man made or natural disasters.
Research tells us that one in three
dollars spent on economic development is lost to disaster. Designing and
deploying a resilience approach significantly reduces the negative
impact of potential losses.
An example of how resilience is changing
development approaches is through the African Union’s African Risk
Capacity (ARC). The agricultural insurance platform was established in
2012, and now boasts 32 member states.
Its value was seen once again when the
ARC paid out more than $26 million to Mauritania, Niger and Senegal,
whose farmers had been affected severely by drought, but had paid
combined premiums of $8 million for drought insurance.
Over 1.3 million people and over half a
million livestock were provided with much needed relief over two years
on account of this mechanism, enabling governments and their citizens to
bounce back without undue pressure.
This is resilience in practice -
investing strategically in mechanisms that provide cushions for hard
times. Africa is a resource rich continent, which with better, more
strategic investment could be a global net innovation frontier.
To achieve this, there is need to invest
in an “innovation first” environment that will allow for quick adoption
and better use of tools to help the continent move forward even in the
face of disruptions. We have before us a real opportunity to go beyond
talking.
In doing so, our narrative can change to
applaud how fast recovery takes place when the next disruption comes,
whether it’s a fire in a highly populated area, the current drought or a
financial shock; as opposed to the inevitable questions around why, yet
again, we were not prepared
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