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Summary
Description
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DESCRIPTION
In this lecture on preparedness, a seasoned humanitarian practitioner reflects on lessons from decades of field work—from early experience in the Ethiopian famine (1973) to later emergency coordination and preparedness support across multiple country offices.
The talk challenges the idea that preparedness is only for specialized agencies. Instead, it argues that preparedness is everyone’s responsibility—from households and businesses to government and humanitarian organizations—and that the hardest part is not writing plans, but building shared understanding, coordination, and sustained action.
Key themes covered:
* How preparedness entered the humanitarian sector as a formal concept in the 1970s
* Why “emergency” is a normative category: emergencies exist when there is consensus that extraordinary action is required
* The strategic value of definitions: what you prepare for and who you prepare for changes everything
* Preparedness dilemmas: multiple threats, uncertain severity, and the limits of planning “for everything”
* The case for a standard minimum level of preparedness + selective contingency planning
* Why “worst-case planning” often fails in practice for communities and organizations
* Practical coordination insights: every level (local–provincial–national) plays a critical role, but often fails to understand the others
The central message is simple but demanding: preparedness is fundamentally about people—how they think, coordinate, decide, and keep readiness alive over time.