Community stories of resilience in ASEAN

  • By ASEAN
  • 29/11/2017

A couple catch fish in a river at a village near Bogalay, one of the worst-hit areas by Cyclone Nargis, May 14, 2008. REUTERS/Aung Hla Tun (MYANMAR)

Share

The Strengthening Community Resilience through Peer–to-Peer learning, is a regional research project implemented by ASEAN in partnership with Oxfam, specifically with the ASEAN Committee on Disaster Management, and was funded by the Asian Development Bank with support from the Government of Canada.

Plan International through the BRACED Myanmar Alliance Coordination Unit (ACU) was the country focal point for Myanmar and facilitated a national resilience champions learning workshop and case study collection and refinement.

In February 2017 the P2P Myanmar team supported a unique learning event in Myanmar. Community leaders were nominated by their peers to develop and share their experience of championing resilience in their community. They worked with their peers and with partner NGOs to develop stories of their experience. They then travelled across Myanmar to share their stories at the Yangon International Business Center with nearly 150 people, including resilience practitioners from INGOs, donors, government officials, local entrepreneurs, and academics.

Three of the inspiring stories shared at this event are presented in the Myanmar Case study ‘The Role of Community Champions and Collaborations in Community Resilience’ highlighting experience of BRACED communities in story 6 on page 77 of the book. They show that community leaders play a necessary role as innovators and brokers who support collaborative, bottom-up planning and experimentation that can help transform their communities.

The book highlights good practice in resilience building across ASEAN.

Download PDF

Video

From camel to cup

From Camel to Cup' explores the importance of camels and camel milk in drought ridden regions, and the under-reported medicinal and vital health benefits of camel milk

Blogs

As climate risks rise, insurance needed to protect development

Less than 5 percent of disaster losses are covered by insurance in poorer countries, versus 50 percent in rich nations


Disasters happen to real people – and it's complicated

Age, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation and many more factors must be considered if people are to become resilient to climate extremes


NGOs are shaking up climate services in Africa. Should we be worried?

A concern is around the long-term viability of hard-fought development gains


The paradox of water development in Kenya's drylands

In Kenya's Wajir county, the emphasis on water development is happening at the expense of good water governance


Latest Photos

Tweets

Update cookies preferences