A/RES/69/283
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030
Monitor. Such mechanisms may promote the exchange of non-sensitive information
on disaster risks to the relevant national Government bodies and stakeholders in the
interest of sustainable social and economic development.
Priority 3: Investing in disaster risk reduction for resilience
29. Public and private investment in disaster risk prevention and reduction through
structural and non-structural measures are essential to enhance the economic, social,
health and cultural resilience of persons, communities, countries and their assets, as
well as the environment. These can be drivers of innovation, growth and job
creation. Such measures are cost-effective and instrumental to save lives, prevent
and reduce losses and ensure effective recovery and rehabilitation.
National and local levels
30.
To achieve this, it is important:
(a) To allocate the necessary resources, including finance and logistics, as
appropriate, at all levels of administration for the development and the
implementation of disaster risk reduction strategies, policies, plans, laws and
regulations in all relevant sectors;
(b) To promote mechanisms for disaster risk transfer and insurance, risksharing and retention and financial protection, as appropriate, for both public and
private investment in order to reduce the financial impact of disasters on
Governments and societies, in urban and rural areas;
(c) To strengthen, as appropriate, disaster-resilient public and private
investments, particularly through structural, non-structural and functional disaster
risk prevention and reduction measures in critical facilities, in particular schools and
hospitals and physical infrastructures; building better from the start to withstand
hazards through proper design and construction, including the use of the principles
of universal design and the standardization of building materials; retrofitting and
rebuilding; nurturing a culture of maintenance; and taking into account economic,
social, structural, technological and environmental impact assessments;
(d) To protect or support the protection of cultural and collecting institutions
and other sites of historical, cultural heritage and religious interest;
(e) To promote the disaster risk resilience of workplaces through structural
and non-structural measures;
(f) To promote the mainstreaming of disaster risk assessments into land-use
policy development and implementation, including urban planning, land degradation
assessments and informal and non-permanent housing, and the use of guidelines and
follow-up tools informed by anticipated demographic and environmental changes;
(g) To promote the mainstreaming of disaster risk assessment, mapping and
management into rural development planning and management of, inter alia,
mountains, rivers, coastal flood plain areas, drylands, wetlands and all other areas
prone to droughts and flooding, including through the identification of areas that are
safe for human settlement, and at the same time preserving ecosystem functions that
help to reduce risks;
(h) To encourage the revision of existing or the development of new building
codes and standards and rehabilitation and reconstruction practices at the national or
local levels, as appropriate, with the aim of making them more applicable within the
local context, particularly in informal and marginal human settlements, and
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