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With heatwaves, bushfires, and floods, small towns and their surrounding communities have confronted a combination of successive disasters fuelled by climate change. And it鈥檚 predicted to only get worse.

鈥淎s the , climate-fuelled disasters, especially those in Australia, are set to get worse,鈥 says , Judith Neilson Chair in Architecture at 国产精品 Arts, Design & Architecture, and Lead, who specialises in disaster risk reduction and response.

Prof. Sanderson says one of the biggest challenges of our time is helping regional areas manage disasters of increasing frequency and scale.

鈥淪o, the challenge for all of us, but particularly areas at increasing risk of climate-fuelled disasters, is to get ahead of what鈥檚 coming,鈥 he says.聽

鈥淲e need to ask: what we can do to reduce or even prevent some of these disasters from happening?鈥

Lessons from disaster response

Prof. Sanderson says that among the most critical lessons from disaster response is the need to build resilience 鈥 otherwise known as the capacity of communities to survive, adapt and grow in the face of challenges, both expected and unimagined.

He says in regional communities, building resilience is about tailoring risk management solutions to .

鈥淭his requires genuine engagement with people and listening to identify areas of need, and trusting local knowledge and experience to understand how we can further reduce risks,鈥 says Prof. Sanderson.

Prof. Sanderson will draw upon humanitarian responses to large disasters nationally and internationally in a new two-year project that supports the Council and surrounding local communities in the Snowy Valleys towards developing more resilient towns.

This project, one of several funded by Resilience NSW, will help to build the resilience of small towns in the regions to fires, floods, and other emergencies by supporting community members, community sector organisations, businesses, and local councils to enhance disaster recovery, preparedness, mitigation, and prevention strategies.

Developing practical, community-owned measures will be the central focus and will include plans such as risk assessments,聽awareness-raising, participatory 鈥榓ction-planning鈥 workshops, scenario planning and business continuity planning.

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Prof. Sanderson says the project is a shared endeavour, working closely with all members across local communities to identify what community-led resilience looks like.

鈥淔or resilience to work, it has to prioritise people,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淪o, the project is about developing locally-owned activities, whatever they may be, based on local knowledge and experience to help build that culture of resilience.鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of good activity going on already 鈥撀爈ook at what people have already been through 鈥撀爏o we will be plugging into what is already happening, working with local NGOs like Anglicare and others, and adding value where we can, in order to help integrate local knowledge and coordinate efforts.鈥

The project will also embrace different engagement models to share and manage risk, including using social media platforms and chat groups to engage younger people.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e living in a WhatsApp and TikTok world where people in their teens engage in a very different way, so we need to understand that, listen to that, learn from that, and reach people on the platforms that they鈥檙e on,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says.

Andrew Rae from Snowy Valleys Council says the project will help to streamline disaster-preparedness and response efforts across the community and build local initiatives.

鈥淭his project will take a ground-up approach to developing plans,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e want these plans to be developed and owned by our communities; it is the key to their success.鈥

Prof. Sanderson says resilience is a part of an evolving story around climate change, but it鈥檚 one that everybody needs to own.

鈥淭here is a rule in resilience that if you鈥檙e doing it alone, then you鈥檙e doing it wrong,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淓veryone has a role to play, whether they鈥檙e four years old or 90.

鈥淗umanity has risen to the challenge in the past, and there鈥檚 no reason why it can鈥檛 again.鈥