2019
DOI: 10.1111/disa.12397
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Building safety in humanitarian programmes that support post‐disaster shelter self‐recovery: an evidence review

Abstract: The humanitarian sector is increasingly aware of the role that good quality evidence plays in the underpinning of effective and accountable practice. This review addresses the need for reliable evidence by evaluating current knowledge about the intersection of two key outcome targets of post‐disaster shelter response: supporting shelter self‐recovery and building back safer. Evidence about post‐disaster shelter programmes that aim to improve hazard resistance while supporting shelter self‐recovery has been sys… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 50 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…A program similar to FEMA's past pilot program known as Sheltering and Temporary Essential Power (STEP) would allow the emergency shelter, temporary shelter, temporary housing, and permanent housing to be combined into one singular entity, enabling homeowner inclusion through the entire process and efficiency of time and resources. While this option improves feasibility, expenditure, and wellbeing during implementation, it has not been fully established in temporary housing research due to a lack of data regarding the success of the recovery activities [106].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A program similar to FEMA's past pilot program known as Sheltering and Temporary Essential Power (STEP) would allow the emergency shelter, temporary shelter, temporary housing, and permanent housing to be combined into one singular entity, enabling homeowner inclusion through the entire process and efficiency of time and resources. While this option improves feasibility, expenditure, and wellbeing during implementation, it has not been fully established in temporary housing research due to a lack of data regarding the success of the recovery activities [106].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tag‐Eldeen (, p. 409) describes this challenge, where ‘the tyranny of urgency governs the conventional approaches to humanitarian assistances and limits the scope for collaboration, underestimates and underutilises local capacity and knowledge’. Furthermore, irrespective of the type of local participation or the level of control, the timing of when local actors secure global support affects the success of their recovery (Davidson et al ., ; Harriss et al ., ). These dimensions include the timing of initial engagement between local and global actors following a crises and the timing of local contributions in the recovery process.…”
Section: Recalibrating Against Local Pace and Trajectorymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…More recently, global actors have purposefully observed households as they recover their shelter and settlements following crises, in a similar way to Davis in the 1980s. The initiative taken by local actors has been termed ‘self‐recovery’ (Parrack et al ., ; Flinn et al ., ; Maynard, Parker & Twigg, ; Harriss, Parrack & Jordan, ). One advantage of this concept is that it may apply to a range of recovery activities and at any point on the recovery journey, including construction temporary or permanent shelter.…”
Section: Local–global Partnerships To Recover Shelter and Settlementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…17 Davis and Alexander (2016). 18 Schofield and Miranda Morel (2017); Harriss et al (2020). 19 ; Harriss et al (2020).…”
Section: Defining Self-recoverymentioning
confidence: 99%