Reducing disaster risk is critical to securing the ambitions of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and natural hazard scientists make a key contribution to achieving this aim. Understanding Earth processes and dynamics underpins hazard analysis, which (alongside analysis of other disaster risk drivers) informs the actions required to manage and reduce disaster risk. Here we suggest how natural hazard research scientists can better contribute to the planning and development of sustainable and resilient communities through improved engagement in disaster risk reduction (DRR). Building on existing good practice, this perspective piece aims to provoke discussion in the natural hazard science community about how we can strengthen our engagement in DRR. We set out seven recommendations for enhancing the integration of natural hazard science into DRR: (i) characterise multi-hazard environments; (ii) prioritise effective, positive, long-term partnerships; (iii) understand and listen to your stakeholders; (iv) embed cultural understanding into natural hazard research; (v) ensure improved and equitable access to hazard information; (vi) champion people-centred DRR (leaving no one behind); and (vii) improve links between DRR and sustainable development. We then proceed to synthesise key actions that natural hazard scientists and research funders should consider taking to improve education, training, and research design and to strengthen institutional, financial, and policy actions. We suggest that these actions should help to strengthen the effective application of natural hazard science to reduce disaster risk. By recognising and taking steps to address the issues raised in these recommendations, we propose that the natural hazard science community can more effectively contribute to the inter-/transdisciplinary, integrated work required to improve DRR.
This paper considers how natural hazard research scientists can better contribute to the planning and development of sustainable and resilient communities through improved engagement in disaster risk reduction (DRR). We target natural hazard scientists with an interest in contributing to sustainable development and resilience building, but who are uncertain of what steps to take. Collectively we as authors represent organisations in academia, the public sector, and civil society with expertise from a range of countries and hazard settings. We reflect on existing good practice and identify how the natural hazard science community (including geologists, seismologists, volcanologists, hydrologists, meteorologists, physical geographers, geomorphologists) can strengthen the translation, adoption, and effective application of their understanding of physical processes and hazards to reduce disaster risk. While recognising the many debates relating to terminology, to inform the reader, we set out in Table 1 key terms and definitions used throughout this paper.
Key terms and definitions used throughout this paper.
Natural hazards (e.g. landslides, earthquakes, floods) have a significant impact on lives, livelihoods, and economic growth, disproportionately affecting the most vulnerable in society and threatening development progress (Pelling et al., 2004). Between 1998 and 2017, disasters resulted in direct economic losses of USD 2908 billion, 1.3 million fatalities, and 4.4 billion people injured, rendered homeless, displaced, or needing emergency assistance (CRED/UNDRR, 2018). To achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), we must accelerate efforts to reduce impacts and diverge from a “business as usual” approach (Spangenberg, 2016). The UN Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (or “Sendai Framework”) aims to address this challenge, setting out a strategy to improve DRR (UNDRR, 2015).
While the Sendai Framework has a clear role for the natural hazard science
community (Gill and Bullough, 2017), disasters are a complex and
interdisciplinary challenge. Natural hazard scientists alone cannot provide
the solutions necessary to ensure sustainable and resilient communities. The
spatial and temporal occurrence of hazardous phenomena with exposure and
vulnerability (both defined in Table 1) results in the generation
of risk and potential for devastating effects. In this context, development
challenges such as poverty, inequality, lack of access to and
overconsumption of resources, climate change, and uncontrolled urbanisation
can all drive changes to exposure and/or vulnerability, thus contributing to
disaster risk (Pelling et al., 2004). Sustainable solutions require coherent
engagement with diverse sectors and disciplines, including but not limited
to the natural sciences. From our observations of research processes and
collaborations within and beyond the international natural science
community, we recognise some emerging trends, including more
These trends are positive and offer opportunities for natural scientists to enrich their research, embed it into policy and practice, and help deliver development impact.
Building on existing good practice, this perspective piece therefore aims to provoke discussion in the natural hazard science community about how we can make the most of these opportunities and strengthen our engagement in DRR. In Sect. 2, we set out seven recommendations for improving the integration of natural hazard science into DRR. In Sect. 3, we synthesise key actions that natural hazard scientists and research funders can take to improve education and training, research design and methods, and partnerships and practice. In Sect. 4, we summarise some of the key benefits to the natural hazard community and conclude that by taking specific steps, the natural hazard community can better contribute to interdisciplinary, integrated work to improve DRR. We acknowledge that not all natural hazard scientists need to work across all the proposed areas and that there is a clear requirement for disciplinary specialism. However, it is critical for natural hazard scientists to be aware of the broader DRR landscape and opportunities for co-benefits to both the natural hazard community and society through enhanced ways of working.
By recognising and taking steps to address the issues raised in these recommendations, we propose in Sect. 4 that the natural hazard science community can more effectively contribute to the inter-/transdisciplinary, integrated work needed to improve DRR.
Understanding disaster risk, the first
Understanding the multi-hazard landscape of a region gives a better understanding of risk and can help to inform management priorities, ensuring actions taken to reduce vulnerability to one hazard do not inadvertently increase vulnerability to others, while not ignoring the impacts of consecutive disasters (Tobin and Montz, 1997; ARMONIA, 2007; Kappes et al., 2010; de Ruiter et al., 2020; Gill et al., 2020). Whilst work is being undertaken towards this objective, a single-hazard approach to research and dissemination is still dominant (Ciurean et al., 2018). This can result in technical excellence with respect to single-hazard research but hinders cross-disciplinary learning and reduces multi-hazard dialogue.
Literature describing approaches to understand multi-hazard relationships is limited, often focused on simulated environments and combinations of two hazards, rather than methods examining real multi-hazard environments exposed to interrelating hazards (Ciurean et al., 2018). Understanding multi-hazard risk requires new approaches to knowledge infrastructures (i.e. the networks of people, institutions, and processes concerned with the world's knowledge), data collection and management, database structure, and hazard modelling to understand case histories and potential future scenarios of risk. For example, databases that record losses from disasters could be adapted to reflect the multi-hazard nature of the hazards involved and improve attribution of disaster losses to specific processes within this multi-hazard disaster (e.g. Froude and Petley, 2018). In terms of training and organisational management, we propose that more space (e.g. physical office space, space on a curriculum) should be dedicated to working across disciplines and identifying the connections between single hazards. Hemingway and Gunawan (2018) and Golnaraghi (2012) outline principles and successful examples of multi-hazard partnerships at the national level.
New approaches to data collection are needed to better characterise multi-hazard environments. These include consideration of different scale events, ensuring that low-magnitude, frequent events are considered. Smaller magnitude events and their impacts are often not recorded because they are below the resolution of recording methods (Guzzetti et al., 2012) or do not qualify as an “event” due to an imposed threshold (Gall et al., 2009). Yet, particularly in the Global South (so-called “developing countries”), the cumulative impact of these small, frequent hazards (also known as “extensive hazards”; UNDRR, 2009) can outweigh the impact of larger events, as well as erode the coping capacity of communities when high-magnitude events do occur (Bull-Kamanga et al., 2003). The integration of data from diverse sources (e.g. fieldwork, published literature, grey literature, interviews to capture local perceptions of hazards, and questionnaires) can help to more fully understand the hazard environment. Examples include the DesInventar database, which primarily collects records from local newspaper archives to investigate events where only a small number of people were affected (Satterthwaite et al., 2018). Compiling detailed databases is time consuming but provides a more complete body of evidence to understand the full characteristics of hazards affecting a region and a more accurate spatial pattern of mortality and morbidity (Osuteye et al., 2017).
Another important approach to data collection that enriches understanding of the multi-hazard environment and extensive events is citizen science. Hicks et al. (2019) note citizen science to be “the participation of people from outside professional organisations in the gathering or analysis of scientific data” and present a systematic global mapping of citizen science used for DRR. This review shows how citizen science can generate shared understanding of hazardous phenomena. In the example of Jacobs et al. (2019), a network of observers in Uganda helped collect and share data on eight different hazards, contributing to greater understanding of extensive hazards impacting people in the region.
The hazard environment is not static but can change due to natural forcing or anthropogenic activity, including climate change. Such processes can change the likelihood of natural hazards occurring, as well as hazards triggering or catalysing other hazards (Gill and Malamud, 2017; AghaKouchak et al., 2018). For example, road construction can increase the likelihood of landslides being triggered during an earthquake or heavy rain (Montgomery, 1994; Owen et al., 2008). Long-term studies of dynamic landscape changes due to anthropogenic activity are often beyond the life cycle of research projects. Such studies may require different ways of working, such as establishing partnerships with organisations with a long-term presence in an area.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
In both training and operational settings, space should be dedicated to
working across disciplines to identify a fuller range of hazards and their
potential interactions (or coincidence in time). New ways to collect data on, and analysis of, multi-hazards are needed,
progressing from the consideration of two hazard types in simulated
scenarios to multiple hazard types in real-world contexts (Ciurean et al.,
2018). Enhanced communication across disciplines can help to facilitate dialogue
relating to risk from multi-hazards. We encourage leadership from
geoscience unions, research funders, and professional associations to
facilitate more cross-hazard cooperation through joint meetings and
collaborative working spaces.
Reducing disaster risk requires generating and utilising knowledge from across disciplines and sectors (UNDRR, 2015; Twigg, 2015). Recognition of the complexity of risk has led to an increase in calls for and application of interdisciplinary partnerships to disaster risk and resilience research, integrating natural and physical science knowledge, methods, and/or approaches with the social sciences, arts, and humanities. While natural hazard scientists do not need to become social scientists (or vice versa), greater engagement with the social sciences can help them to sit their work in its societal and political context, strengthening work and its impact. Donovan et al. (2011) note that for a geoscientist, interdisciplinarity requires learning “the customs and language of a foreign discipline, reading, exploring and absorbing social science methodologies and theories”. Fundamentally, this requires flexibility, the willingness to listen and do things differently, and respect for differences.
The drive to link research to practice and the participation of “non-scientists/specialists” in the design and implementation of disaster risk science (transdisciplinary research practice; Horlick-Jones and Sime, 2004; Hilhorst and Heijmans, 2012) calls for strong partnerships. This acknowledges the need to work with those at risk rather than viewing them as research “subjects” or “recipients” (Pelling, 2007). This can have many benefits, including helping to increase the visibility of preventative measures to communities at risk. Citizen science is one way by which those at risk can be part of the research team, requiring frameworks to consider issues of equity, justice, and empowerment to ensure effective, positive, long-term partnerships (Hicks et al., 2019).
Partnerships, emphasised in the Sendai Framework targets and guiding
principles, are key to harnessing knowledge, to better understand and
address the problems faced by those at risk (see Sect. 2.3).
Partnerships can be of many different kinds (including networks and
collaborations) and when established effectively, they can increase the
impact of DRR initiatives by ensuring their sustainability, replicability,
and better use of resources (Twigg, 2015). Partnerships can be both vertical
(global, regional, national to local) and horizontal (across sectors and
disciplines) (Twigg, 2015). Existing connections are often the best starting
point; the Sendai Framework recommends that science contributions to DRR can
be enhanced through the coordination of existing networks and scientific
institutions at all levels and regions (UNDRR, 2015). Networks can create an
enabling environment for knowledge sharing, development, and technology
transfer (Šakić Trogrlić et al., 2017). For example, the Global
Volcano Model network successfully coordinated the input of
Although essential, partnerships can be difficult to establish and maintain. They take time, negotiation, sustained effort, transparency, trust, resources, commitment, and institutional support (Twigg, 2015). Ensuring researchers understand their role in DRR policy and practice, and likewise the role and responsibilities of partner institutions, underpins effective, equitable, and trusting partnerships. Similarly, recognising the distinction between those institutions with operational mandates and those undertaking research is critical to ensuring that research supports, rather than undermines, national and local capacity (see Newhall et al., 1999).
The ELRHA Guide to Constructing Effective Partnerships (ELRHA, 2012) provides a useful overview of the benefits and challenges of collaborations between humanitarian and academic organisations and provides practical guidance on identifying, establishing, and maintaining effective partnerships. Generic guidance on how individual academics and organisations build more effective partnerships with, for instance, national science institutions outside of their own country is not common. An initial step would be to see whether any internal policies exist to support this, such as guidance for working overseas (e.g. obtaining research permissions), data management policies (e.g. data sharing and intellectual property rights), and ethics policies and frameworks. The co-establishment of memoranda of understanding, including codes of practice and ethics, can form the basis for effective, lasting institutional partnerships; they are underpinned with funding to support the individuals sustaining these partnerships. Documenting effective partnership examples (and any challenges) and sharing these with the wider research community would also benefit those researchers new to building networks and collaborations.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
Build partnerships with a range of social scientists to help put natural
hazard science in its broader societal context. Higher education and ongoing professional development training should
include partnership development topics (e.g. project management,
facilitation skills, and inter- and transdisciplinary working). Natural hazard scientists should implement ethical frameworks for building
and maintaining equitable partnerships (see Conway and Waage, 2010). Funding opportunities should recognise, and provide for, the time and
resources required to build partnerships (e.g. attend in-person meetings or
conferences), with this contributing to capacity strengthening. Where remote
working is required, virtual communication tools, social media, and fora
such as groups on ResearchGate (2020) can initiate dialogue. Consideration
should be given to those who might be missing from these partnerships and how they
could be engaged through the project. Institutional support for partnerships, through Memoranda of Understanding
between institutions, for instance, can ensure mutually agreed expectations,
codes of practice, and ethics. Roles and responsibilities within partnerships
should be discussed and clarified. One project management approach is to use
a RACI diagram (see Funding for researchers should be based in the region of study to help strengthen both
knowledge exchange and sustainability of the impact.
Understanding the priorities, interests, ambitions, and challenges of stakeholders is essential to developing and undertaking effective DRR research. Stakeholders might include different researchers across many disciplines, government agencies, non-governmental agencies, civil society, the private sector, and communities at risk (Twigg, 2015). Stakeholder mapping (identifying and understanding stakeholders in a given project and how they sit within and influence a system) is an important task when connecting natural hazard science to DRR, although a significant undertaking. There are many tools to support this process, with one illustrated in Fig. 1. Stakeholder mapping identifies the relative interest and influence of stakeholders throughout the project life cycle, thereby allowing the project team to focus and adapt their engagement during the project. Stakeholder mapping may help identify potential partners (Sect. 2.2), or existing partners may assist in identifying who the stakeholders are.
Stakeholder mapping tool. Determining the level of interest and influence (or power) of different stakeholders can help to ensure effective communication with each group. Figure adapted from Mendelow (1981).
Consultation with stakeholders should help inform the types of research activities undertaken. There are numerous examples where a hypothesis, or a proposed solution, transpires not to be a stakeholder priority, and thus research outputs struggle to gain traction (Clot, 2014; Schipper and Pelling, 2006). The Sendai Framework advocates for opportunities for Global South nations to identify and express their needs and priorities and for countries in the Global North (so-called “developed countries”) to actively listen to them (UNDRR, 2015). Asking stakeholders “what is important to you?” can open up new ideas and avenues of effective collaboration. In Malawi, Leck et al. (2018) highlight how international non-governmental organisations (NGOs) had set the agenda for local DRR, undermining the authority of local governments. To solve problems that are both scientifically novel and societally relevant, it is key to have awareness of local context (political, economic, social, cultural, technological, legal, and environmental) and local perceptions of risk through meaningful engagement and co-production of research with stakeholders.
Rather than starting research with systematic data collection to test a hypothesis, time may be better devoted to the development of a research question that is informed by stakeholder needs and an understanding of local context. For example, instead of beginning with the aim of developing a GIS model for visualising earthquake risk, more effective research may commence by investigating who manages earthquake risk, how this is done, what scientific and organisational challenges they face (e.g. which stakeholders are involved, what other priorities do they have, and what other constraints exist on their time), and what their technical, time, and scientific capacities are to develop and adopt new ways of working. Ideally, the project's aims and hypothesis would then be developed in collaboration with stakeholders. Ensuring partners from the Global South (e.g. researchers, NGOs) are co-investigators on research proposals can bring contextual understanding into project design and implementation. Ongoing conversations and assessment of prototypes may be needed to help stakeholders articulate their needs and help researchers understand what research and methods are relevant, over time and through careful management of this important relationship. This dialogue and the emerging contextual understanding can guide more effective hypothesis development and data collection.
“Theory of Change” (Weiss, 1995) is one approach that could enable this co-production, with resources available online (e.g. DIY Toolkit, 2020). Theory of Change starts by using a context analysis to identify the problem to be solved (e.g. reducing deaths from tsunamis) and then works backwards to characterise root drivers of this problem (e.g. ineffective early warning systems), the key audiences for implementing change (e.g. civil protection and community groups), the access points and motivators for those groups, steps required to bring about change, and the broader benefits. At each stage, the Theory of Change approach gives attention to uncertainties and assumptions. Di Baldassarre et al. (2018) noted that societal responses to risk reduction measures can produce unintended consequences. Reflective Theory of Change approaches, combined with an appropriate monitoring programme, can also be used to identify potential unintended negative consequences arising from particular activities or recommendations and determine appropriate mitigation steps.
Practitioners, donors, and academics have applied Theory of Change effectively in different ways (Vogel, 2012), helping to identify key stakeholders and create a roadmap to achieve real change through applied research. While time consuming and often challenging to follow within the typical cycle of funding applications, this approach can be fundamental to developing research programmes that result in improved DRR.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
Higher education and ongoing professional development training should cover
stakeholder mapping, managing people in projects, facilitation skills
(including running workshops), and transdisciplinary working. Training should take place for natural hazard scientists on how to ethically identify
stakeholders and co-produce research questions using techniques such as
Theory of Change. Develop long-term relationships with applied partners such as NGOs and
national institutions (e.g. geological surveys, hazard monitoring agencies)
who have a long-term presence in and access to a range of stakeholders. Mechanisms should exist (e.g. funding for time and networking) to include non-academic
partners and stakeholders in research proposals, co-develop
transdisciplinary research questions, identify desired outputs, and
understand stakeholder capacities.
Culture, defined in Table 1 (but we recognise other definitions exist), includes the social institutions, customs, and beliefs that people hold, as well as the characteristics that unite people (Cannon and Schipper, 2014). Examples include religious beliefs, traditional beliefs, values, livelihood choices, and settlement patterns (Canon and Schipper, 2014). We are part of and affected by culture as researchers, and this can shape the way in which we approach ideas or partnerships as natural hazard scientists. Culture can also affect risk, by either increasing or reducing the vulnerability of individuals and communities, shaping the norms by which the acceptability of risk is defined, and influencing how people respond to and cope with disasters (Bankoff, 2003; Schipper and Dekens, 2009; Canon and Schipper, 2014; O'Connell et al., 2017). Examples include the following.
Indigenous knowledge and culture are attributed to the very high survival rate following the 26 November 1999 tsunami on Pentecost Island, Vanuatu (Walshe and Nunn, 2012).
The cultural expectation that women are caregivers was shown to increase the physical exposure of women to illness and the psychological burden post disaster in Manila, Philippines (Reyes and Lu, 2016).
Local sub-cultures at Merapi volcano, Indonesia, were found to influence local community actions during frequent eruptions (Donovan et al., 2012).
Understanding culture is therefore important when considering how to reduce disaster risk. The Sendai Framework notes that DRR policy and practice should integrate cultural perspectives and advocates for the creation of “cultures of prevention” (vs. response) and maintenance (vs. disrepair which can increase physical vulnerability) to be established (UNDRR, 2015). Therefore, natural hazard scientists should not only understand how culture relates to disaster risk response and reduction, but may also need to work with experts in the social sciences and humanities to help drive changes in established cultures. Understanding culture is a critical part of the context analysis described in Sect. 2.3, done before research, and will require the strong partnerships advocated for in Sect. 2.2. While ethnographic research (i.e. immersion in a group for an extended period, observing behaviour, listening to what is being said, and asking questions; Bryman, 2016) to understand people and their cultures is not part of natural hazard science training, the outcomes of such research could enhance the work of natural hazard scientists and help to maximise the impact. Examples include the following.
Natural hazard scientists sit within their own cultures, and this positionality (defined in Table 1) is likely to affect their approach to research and interactions with others. Researcher positionality could be integrated into the training of hazard scientists. For example, before a researcher engages in work in an unfamiliar or different cultural context to their own, they should reflect on how their experiences, values, and beliefs could influence or prejudice whom they may consult, the questions they may ask, data they gather, “products” they advocate for, and appropriate conduct. Individual perspectives on religion, for example, may mean a researcher is reluctant to collaborate with leaders of faith-based organisations. Analyses of the 2014–2016 Ebola crisis in Sierra Leone, however, demonstrate that faith leaders can play a transformational role in communicating key humanitarian messages (Featherstone, 2015). Likewise, positionality includes consideration of the assumptions that might be extended to researchers by stakeholders and participants, particularly around issues of trust and equality. Being aware of the implications, for instance, of being a researcher from a high-income country working in a low-income country, in terms of stakeholder expectations is critical.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
When developing research partnerships, natural hazard scientists should
consider including those with ethnographic training (e.g. geographers,
historians, and anthropologists), or identify existing and relevant ethnographic
knowledge in publications and reports. When planning research dissemination strategies, public outreach, and
hazard education initiatives, in addition to their partners and
stakeholders, natural hazard scientists could consult literature,
historians, anthropologists to understand cultural constraints, challenges,
and opportunities. Train natural hazard scientists to understand and reflect on their own
positionality, providing them with the skills to understand how their belief
systems may influence their work.
Hazard information should reach those in need, be understood, and be acted on if it is to help reduce risk (Mohadjer et al., 2016). This requires the gap between knowledge generation and knowledge access to be addressed (Aitsi-Selmi et al., 2016). It is often those most vulnerable to the impacts of disasters who struggle to access useable hazard information. The natural hazard science community should consider not only equitable access, but also how to ensure that all stakeholders can act on hazard information. As demonstrated in Sect. 2.2–2.4, working in partnership, listening to stakeholders, and culturally contextualising research can help to create useful hazard information. Citizen science approaches can further bridge the gap between knowledge generation and access (Jacobs et al., 2019). Table 2 further outlines the many factors that can enhance access to hazard information.
Accessibility and usability of hazard information.
Natural hazard scientists should be aware of and sensitive to any barriers if they are to deliver information in an appropriate form, a timely manner, and a way that facilitates action by stakeholders (Scienseed, 2016). Training for hazard scientists could draw on good communication practices to strengthen their ability to make natural hazard science more accessible to groups outside of the professional community. Consideration should be given to the audience and their needs, including (amongst other characteristics) their values, attitudes, concerns, knowledge, language, and personal and social aspirations (Liverman, 2008). Scientists who wish to inform decision making should use this understanding to tailor information to their audience's specific needs. Useful hazard information also takes into account the technical limitations of data. For example, the most common assessment methods for seismic hazard are probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) and deterministic seismic hazard analysis (DSHA). Though useful for developing building codes, PSHA may be misleading in locations where data are sparse (Stein et al., 2018), and other methods may be required (Robinson et al., 2018).
Natural hazard scientists should therefore work collaboratively with partners and stakeholders to develop hazard information products with their intended audience. The most effective method of understanding informational needs of stakeholders is to establish and nurture a two-way communication, co-production, between scientists and decision-makers, building relationships, trust, and credibility over time (Morss et al., 2005). This dialogue will help to guide the choice of language and content of hazard information products to make them more appropriate for stakeholders. This includes the spoken language, but also the terminology and level of understanding of the content pitched at stakeholders.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
Natural hazard scientists should pursue open-access publishing, and/or write
short, accessible summaries of their research (e.g. policy briefs) to be
disseminated to appropriate stakeholders. Good communication practice should be essential training for natural hazard
scientists, exploring the importance of understanding and tailoring
information to specific audiences, and co-developing hazard information
products with intended audiences. Working with partners and stakeholders (co-production) is key to the
creation of useable hazard information.
The SDGs and Sendai Framework both emphasise “leaving no one behind” and ensuring that the poorest and most vulnerable in society have access to the resources, information, and support required to effectively reduce risk and encourage sustainable development. People's ability to prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters is shaped by an array of social, cultural, economic, and political factors (Wisner et al., 2012). Vulnerability to hazards is exacerbated by existing social stigmatisation and isolation, and those who are marginalised in society are often the most vulnerable in facing natural hazards (Pincha, 2008; Wisner et al., 2012; Gorman-Murray, 2018). For natural hazard scientists, this means acknowledging that risk reduction is not simply about the hazard, but also the analysis and understanding of vulnerability (often the weaker component of risk analysis; Schneiderbauer et al., 2006) and actively reflecting upon where we work, with whom we work, and how we work. This may involve consideration of our own positionality (outlined in Sect. 2.4) in terms of how we understand marginalised groups. It also requires informed and difficult decisions, balancing the choice to work in areas where some marginalised groups are located (e.g. fragile states, regions with active conflict, and regions where humanitarian workers are threatened), against whether and how natural hazard scientists can safely, ethically, and effectively work in these regions.
Marginalised groups risk being excluded from all aspects of DRR, including understanding hazards and risk. In a study of flood management in Jakarta, van Voorst and Hellman (2015) found that strategies to increase rainfall infiltration in open spaces had been ineffective due to these spaces being occupied by marginalised groups who did not appear on the official city map. This example highlights how the uncertainties and politics of information used in a seemingly “neutral” hazard assessment may have unanticipated outcomes. Proactive effort is recommended to reach out to, collaborate with (including through citizen science initiatives), and listen to the voices of marginalised groups, with careful consideration of which voices are missing (Brown et al., 2019), starting with stakeholder identification (Sect. 2.3). Marginalised groups may be more vulnerable to disasters, but they also have valuable knowledge, skills, experiences, and coping methods that should not be overlooked or ignored.
Leaving no one behind also means better engagement with indigenous communities and integration of local and indigenous knowledge and perceptions into disaster risk reduction. Environmental history, passed between generations through storytelling, can be an important source of information (see Sect. 2.4), enriching the data used to understand the multi-hazard landscape of a region (see Sect. 2.1). Approaching the topic of local knowledge requires designing fully participatory approaches to reflect its heterogeneity, in terms of both content and distribution within the community (Šakić Trogrlić et al., 2019). Mercer et al. (2010) set out a framework to integrate indigenous and scientific knowledge for disaster risk reduction. Such approaches, and an exploration of their strengths and criticisms, are not typically included in the curricula of subjects training natural hazard scientists (e.g. Earth science). This may hinder the extent to which natural hazard scientists accept the validity of local and indigenous knowledge, proactively engage with this as a source of evidence, and integrate it into hazard assessments. Other groups at risk of being left behind are children and youth, with themes relating to natural hazards and disaster risk often not included in the school curricula for those in the Global South.
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
Increase reflection on Include training on integrating local and indigenous knowledge into natural
hazard assessments and disaster risk reduction. Introduction of natural hazard and DRR-related topics in the curriculum at
lower education levels.
DRR can drive forward and protect development progress and is therefore
embedded within 10 of the 17 SDGs. Goals on poverty, hunger, health,
education, water and sanitation, infrastructure, cities, climate change,
oceans, and terrestrial ecosystems all refer to risk reduction, building
resilience, early warning, or adaptation (United Nations, 2015).
Furthermore, effective sustainable development interventions (e.g.
addressing inequalities, increasing access to resources, better planned
urbanisation) can increase individual, community, institutional, and
infrastructure resilience by reducing exposure and/or vulnerability (Pelling
et al., 2004). Examples of both relationships include the following.
While there is a growing awareness of the relationship between DRR and
sustainable development, it is not yet clear whether this is embedded within
the natural hazard community. Gill and Bullough (2017) noted that only 19
of 1059 sessions at the 2017 European Geoscience Union (EGU) General
Assembly referred to the SDGs, Sendai Framework, or Paris Agreement.
Furthermore, of the 1268 abstracts submitted to sessions within the Natural
Hazards Division of the 2019 EGU General Assembly, only two referred to
“sustainable development”. Based on a Google Scholar search (18 November 2019), of 697 articles published in the EGU journal
Translating natural hazard science into tools that support sustainable development policy and practice requires sustained and effective dialogue (Lubchenco et al., 2015). This may require new partnerships (see Sect. 2.2) and communication methods (Marker, 2016; Stewart and Gill, 2017), to strengthen coherence between different policies, to mainstream DRR, and to avoid a policy in one sector increasing vulnerability to natural hazards. The importance of policy coherence is embedded within the SDGs (United Nations, 2015), and articulated as being critical to climate change adaptation (England et al., 2018).
Suggested actions/priorities for change are as follows.
Increase awareness of how individual natural hazard research projects
join up and relate to regional, national, and local sustainable development,
disaster risk reduction, and disaster risk management strategies. Embed training in public policy into natural hazard science courses at the
university level.
In Sect. 2, we reflected on seven ways those working on natural hazard science can enhance their contribution to DRR, integrating examples of good practice and innovative solutions where appropriate. In Table 3, we synthesise priorities for change proposed in Sect. 2.1 to 2.7, grouping these into changes linked to (i) education, training, and continued professional development; (ii) research priorities, methods, and approaches; and (iii) institutional, financial, and policy actions. Each of these would benefit from aligned funding.
Summary of action points to help improve engagement of natural hazard scientists in DRR.
Whilst the seven recommendations could be conceived as utopian, we have provided some practical steps that build on the existing skills and strengths of natural hazard scientists. In addition, we have identified where enablers, such as training programmes and funding, are required. Action to achieve one of the recommendations in Sect. 2 (e.g. prioritising positive partnerships, Sect. 2.2) could also reinforce other changes (e.g. ensuring equitable access to appropriate information, Sect. 2.5). Although we set out seven distinct themes in Sect. 2, we recognise there are interactions and note the importance of thinking across these themes in an integrated manner. For example, a professional skills module in undergraduate or postgraduate courses that integrates communication, policy engagement, stakeholder mapping, and partnership development training could help deliver many of the ambitions expressed in Table 3. This could also involve opportunities for students to engage with other disciplines engaged in DRR, to understand their approaches and data requirements.
The vision of change we present requires transformation to natural hazard science education and training, introducing new skills and exposing scientists to a wider range of disciplinary knowledge, along with the option to learn interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research approaches. This includes recognising the role of local or indigenous knowledge, demonstrated to be key to community-level risk reduction (e.g. Šakić Trogrlić et al., 2019). As Donovan et al. (2011) notes sometimes stepping into the interdisciplinary space can be actively discouraged, but cultural and ethical understanding, cross-disciplinary communication, and social science research approaches can enhance natural hazard science if included in scientists' training (Lubchenco et al., 2015; Gill, 2017; Stewart and Gill, 2017).
Effective communication is a repeated theme in many of the recommendations in Sect. 2, across sectors, disciplines, and cultures. Yet much of the existing communication training offered to university students focuses on communicating natural hazard science to fellow natural hazard scientists or the public who reside in the same national context as the place they are a student. In contrast, it could be enriching to bring students together from geoscience, engineering, anthropology, health sciences, geography, and the political sciences to explore their research tools, information requirements, and preferred ways of giving and receiving information. Cross-disciplinary engagement at an early stage of a career would likely result in a strengthened understanding of ethics and appreciation of interdisciplinary partnerships throughout their work.
Reforms to the training of natural hazard scientists should be complemented by the adoption of different approaches to determining research questions, building research partnerships, and connecting research to decision makers. Effective partnerships, with clear roles and responsibilities, are important (Sargeant et al., 2018), and these will increasingly include a wider variety of skills and disciplines (e.g. ethnographers, behavioural scientists). Equitable and ethical partnerships take time to develop and maintain, but this should not be an excuse for poor partnership practice. Natural hazard scientists in the Global North have a professional responsibility to listen to the needs and priorities of natural hazard scientists and stakeholders in Global South nations and work with them to address these. Working in partnership, and listening to stakeholders, is fundamental to understanding critical aspects of local context, ensuring effective communication, and including marginalised groups. This process of listening is not a one-off exercise, but iterative and requiring continual engagement.
Whilst individual behaviours can promote change, we recognise that there are a number of institutional and financial transformations required, including improving funding mechanisms to include non-academic partners in research proposals, supporting the development of new training schemes and providing funding for open-access publishing.
This perspective paper has provided evidence and recommendations for how natural hazard scientists can contribute to reducing disaster risk and securing the ambitions of the SDGs. Natural hazard scientists' understanding of Earth processes and dynamics underpins hazard analysis, which (alongside analysis of other disaster risk drivers) in turn informs the actions required to manage and reduce disaster risk. This paper recommends actions the natural hazard science community can take to enhance the contribution of their work to the planning and development of sustainable and resilient communities. We recommend changes to (i) education, training, and continued professional development; (ii) research design, methods, and implementation; and (iii) institutional, financial, and policy actions, to strengthen the translation, adoption, and effective application of their understanding of physical processes and hazards to reduce disaster risk. In addressing the priorities for change set out in Sect. 2, and summarised in Table 3, we propose the following benefits.
Together these benefits will support DRR, and the development of sustainable and resilient communities. It is now the responsibility of individual natural hazard scientists and those in positions of leadership (e.g. course directors, funding agencies) to consider how the recommendations set out here apply to their work and what more they can do to ensure natural hazard science helps realise the ambitions of the Sendai Framework and UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Literature used to inform this invited perspective is set out in the reference list.
All authors contributed to the intellectual discussion preceding this paper, determining the themes to focus on. JCG and FET led the writing of the paper, with significant input from MJD and SM. MB and HM contributed to the writing of the paper, with helpful comments provided throughout. VB reviewed the paper and contributed additional perspectives which enhanced the final version.
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
The authors would like to acknowledge the colleagues, partners, and stakeholders with whom they have worked over their collective research and practitioner careers in DRR and sustainable development. These experiences have informed the authors' contributions to this paper. We thank Andres Payo Garcia and John Rees for thoughtful internal reviews prior to submission. We thank Amy Donovan and the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive and helpful input during peer-review of this paper. Joel C. Gill and Melanie J. Duncan publish with the permission of the Executive Director, British Geological Survey (UKRI).
Joel C. Gill and Melanie J. Duncan contributions to this article have been supported by the British Geological Survey NC-ODA (grant no. NE/R000069/1: Geoscience for Sustainable Futures) and the Royal Society Challenge-Led Grant (grant no. CHL-R1-180192: Using a multi-hazard and catchment-based approach to understand and increase resilience in hyper-expanding cities in Vietnam and the Philippines).
This paper was edited by Paolo Tarolli and reviewed by two anonymous referees.