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How do links between households and NGOs promote disaster resilience and recovery?: A case study of linking social networks on the Bangladeshi coast

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Abstract

Households’ links with NGOs are an important support for disaster resilience and recovery in Bangladesh. Previous studies have examined how social capital promotes disaster recovery. However, few explore the complexities of linking social networks and, in particular, the role of NGOs, after disasters. Through a case study of Cyclone Sidr—2007 affected two coastal villages of Bangladesh, using household surveys, focus groups, and key informant interviews, this study examines when these linking networks perform well and poorly. NGOs provide strong support through immediate relief (food, water, medicine, household utensils), shelter (building materials, new houses), and livelihood assistance (microcredit, cropping seeds, livestock, fishing boats, and nets). However, this catalyzes relief dependency also, NGOs generally favour households they lend to, sometimes demand normal repayments continue even though a disaster has occurred, and often take bribes when they are distributing livelihood assistance to households. We suspect many Bangladeshi NGOs focus on relief activities rather than preparedness, because post-disaster relief provides significant opportunities for financial irregularities, as the cash flows (donor support) are relatively large. Instead, NGOs should increase their emphasis on disaster risk reduction, providing more robust housing and fostering alternative livelihood options rather relief centric activities, because households’ have a strong preference for empowerment and resilience, rather than relief dependency.

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Notes

  1. Semi-pucca houses are mostly made by mud, occasionally brick and cement used for floor/foundation; walls are made by bamboo, timber, and CGI sheets, and roof is covered by the CGI sheets, locally called tin.

  2. Kutcha houses are made by mud, walls are made by bamboo, jute stick, and straw, and roof is made by straw.

  3. US$ 1 = BDT 77 as of April 2013.

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Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Macquarie University, Australia, for support with an International Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship. Special thanks to the disaster practitioners and policy-makers, Upazilla Nirbahi Officer and Cyclone Preparedness Program, Patharghata, the local NGOs, and the Charduani Union Parishad for their kind support during fieldwork between February and July 2013.

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Islam, R., Walkerden, G. How do links between households and NGOs promote disaster resilience and recovery?: A case study of linking social networks on the Bangladeshi coast. Nat Hazards 78, 1707–1727 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11069-015-1797-4

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