Blogs
The World Bank plays a major role to support post-conflict recovery and reconstruction worldwide. It is scaling up its support to sub-national and local planning authorities and municipal services in countries such as Iraq, Yemen, Nigeria, and Myanmar. However, reconstruction efforts often face challenges such as time constraints, weak implementation capacity, a lack of social engagement, and ineffective cookie-cutter approaches.
With heavy ongoing investments in climate resilience and flood risk management, now is the critical time for Sri Lanka to build an effective flood- and climate-resilience system, benefitting from global experiences.
With heavy ongoing investments in climate resilience and flood risk management, now is the critical time for Sri Lanka to build an effective flood- and climate-resilience system, benefitting from global experiences.
The World Bank and the Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR) are working to develop a recipe to advance resilience for South Asia and beyond. For example, as part of its plan to provide safe havens to nearly 14 million people in nine coastal districts, Bangladesh is making emergency evacuation shelters more accessible to differently-abled people.
Hurricane Dorian made landfall in The Bahamas as a Category 5 storm on September 1, battering the northern islands of Grand Bahama and Abaco for almost three days. In the days following the hurricane, reports clearly showed devastation but left many questions. The World Bank’s Global Rapid post-disaster Damage Estimation (GRADE) approach, developed by its Disaster-Resilience Analytics and Solutions (D-RAS) team, was able to address many of the critical questions within 13 days using a rapid, desk-based approach.