date: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.5 pdf:docinfo:title: Education and Disaster Vulnerability in Southeast Asia: Evidence and Policy Implications xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: This article summarizes the growing theoretical and empirical literature on the impact of education on disaster vulnerability with a focus on Southeast Asia. Education and learning can take place in different environments in more or less formalized ways. They can influence disaster vulnerability as the capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist, and recover from natural hazard in direct and indirect ways. Directly, through education and learning, individuals acquire knowledge, abilities, skills and perceptions that allow them to effectively prepare for and cope with the consequences of disaster shocks. Indirectly, education gives individuals and households access to material, informational and social resources, which can help reducing disaster vulnerability. We highlight central concepts and terminologies and discuss the different theoretical mechanisms through which education may have an impact. Supportive empirical evidence is presented and discussed with a particular focus on the role of inclusiveness in education and challenges in achieving universal access to high-quality education. Based on situation analysis and best practice cases, policy implications are derived that can inform the design and implementation of education and learning-based disaster risk reduction efforts in the region. dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.5 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Education and Disaster Vulnerability in Southeast Asia: Evidence and Policy Implications modified: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z cp:subject: This article summarizes the growing theoretical and empirical literature on the impact of education on disaster vulnerability with a focus on Southeast Asia. Education and learning can take place in different environments in more or less formalized ways. They can influence disaster vulnerability as the capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist, and recover from natural hazard in direct and indirect ways. Directly, through education and learning, individuals acquire knowledge, abilities, skills and perceptions that allow them to effectively prepare for and cope with the consequences of disaster shocks. Indirectly, education gives individuals and households access to material, informational and social resources, which can help reducing disaster vulnerability. We highlight central concepts and terminologies and discuss the different theoretical mechanisms through which education may have an impact. Supportive empirical evidence is presented and discussed with a particular focus on the role of inclusiveness in education and challenges in achieving universal access to high-quality education. Based on situation analysis and best practice cases, policy implications are derived that can inform the design and implementation of education and learning-based disaster risk reduction efforts in the region. pdf:docinfo:subject: This article summarizes the growing theoretical and empirical literature on the impact of education on disaster vulnerability with a focus on Southeast Asia. Education and learning can take place in different environments in more or less formalized ways. They can influence disaster vulnerability as the capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist, and recover from natural hazard in direct and indirect ways. Directly, through education and learning, individuals acquire knowledge, abilities, skills and perceptions that allow them to effectively prepare for and cope with the consequences of disaster shocks. Indirectly, education gives individuals and households access to material, informational and social resources, which can help reducing disaster vulnerability. We highlight central concepts and terminologies and discuss the different theoretical mechanisms through which education may have an impact. Supportive empirical evidence is presented and discussed with a particular focus on the role of inclusiveness in education and challenges in achieving universal access to high-quality education. Based on situation analysis and best practice cases, policy implications are derived that can inform the design and implementation of education and learning-based disaster risk reduction efforts in the region. pdf:docinfo:creator: Roman Hoffmann and Daniela Blecha PTEX.Fullbanner: This is pdfTeX, Version 3.14159265-2.6-1.40.17 (TeX Live 2016/W32TeX) kpathsea version 6.2.2 meta:author: Roman Hoffmann and Daniela Blecha trapped: False meta:creation-date: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z created: Fri Feb 14 10:18:42 CET 2020 access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z Author: Roman Hoffmann and Daniela Blecha producer: pdfTeX-1.40.17 pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.17 Keywords: education; disaster vulnerability; disaster risk reduction; Southeast Asia; review; policy implications access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Roman Hoffmann and Daniela Blecha dcterms:created: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z Last-Modified: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z dcterms:modified: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z title: Education and Disaster Vulnerability in Southeast Asia: Evidence and Policy Implications Last-Save-Date: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: education; disaster vulnerability; disaster risk reduction; Southeast Asia; review; policy implications pdf:docinfo:modified: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z meta:save-date: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z pdf:docinfo:custom:PTEX.Fullbanner: This is pdfTeX, Version 3.14159265-2.6-1.40.17 (TeX Live 2016/W32TeX) kpathsea version 6.2.2 Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Roman Hoffmann and Daniela Blecha dc:subject: education; disaster vulnerability; disaster risk reduction; Southeast Asia; review; policy implications access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 17 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true pdf:docinfo:trapped: False meta:keyword: education; disaster vulnerability; disaster risk reduction; Southeast Asia; review; policy implications access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2020-02-14T09:18:42Z