Internationale Dag voor het Beheersen van Natuurrampen: 'Vrouwen en Meisjes - de (on)zichtbare kracht van weerbaarheid (en)

Met dank overgenomen van Directoraat-Generaal Europese Civiele Bescherming en Humanitaire Operaties (ECHO) i, gepubliceerd op vrijdag 12 oktober 2012.

13/10/2012 - The International Day for Disaster Reduction (IDDR), October 13, aims at raising awareness of how people are taking action to reduce their risk to disasters. The theme of the 2012 International Day for Disaster Reduction (IDDR) is "Women and Girls - the [in]visible Force of Resilience".

Women and girls are powerful agents of change. The way they contribute to protecting and rebuilding their community should not be overseen. To be strong, a community cannot overlook half of its population: gender inequality puts everyone in danger when natural hazards strike. Strengthening the gender balance in a community means strengthening resilience.

The European Commission recognizes the importance of disaster preparedness programmes that include the whole community. From Guatemala to Bangladesh, our Disaster Risk Reduction programmes involve everyone in the village, from school children to elderly, and men and women alike.

On October 16th, we will be debating "Disaster Risk Reduction at the age of Climate Change" with our partners the International Federation of the Red Cross (IFRC) and the European Network of Political Foundations (ENOP) at the 2012 European DevelopmentDays.

To know more about this panel

To know more about the International Day of Disaster Reduction

To know more about our Disaster Risk Reduction Programmes

Videos

ECHO in Central America

We are working together, we try to ensure we learn from each other...

ECHO, from the early days until now, has consistently been reaching out...

ECHO is not just a donor. It is also an actor that proposes changes...

Daniel Urena, ECHO, Haiti

What you want to do in disaster-prone countries,...

Nepal Risk Reduction Consortium - The Value of empowered ...

Photo stories

Djibouti's desert gardens

Building Resilience in the Ganges Delta

Sahel - where 'preparation' means 'prevention'

Adapting to climate change in Ethiopia

Blogs

Djibouti: Farming the barren wasteland

Disaster risk reduction in Georgia’s class rooms

Making communities stronger against flooding where it matters most

Improving resilience in Georgia: 'It’s for our own safety'

Why it is time to take the weather seriously

Building Back Better in Indonesia

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