Haiti was struck by a heavy earthquake in 2010 and international aid poured into the country. News reports in 2011 were not very positive about the results of post-disaster reconstruction: “The relief efforts are only putting Haiti on life-support instead of evolving into the next stage of development”. One of the non-governmental organisations (NGOs) involved in Haiti was Cordaid, implementing a ‘transitional shelter strategy’ to support the transformation of neigh-bourhoods from a state of life-support into a state of self-sustaining development. The strategy was implemented in both a rural and an urban area. The main feature of the strategy was the provision of structures that could be adapted from simple shelters to permanent houses. Since the results of the strategy were mixed and ambiguous, a comparative case study was conducted to evaluate the shelter strategy in both areas. The objective was to draw lessons about what has to be taken into account when formulating future urban shelter strategies. The case study is discussed in this article. The main finding from the case study is that producing the intended number of shelters within the financial and time budgets that were set (efficiency), was more difficult in the urban area than in the rural area. But the conditions for linking relief and development (effectiveness) are more favourable in the urban context. NGOs may achieve long-term (effective) results in the urban context when a lower efficiency can be justified. That is why NGOs need to engage in a debate about the extent to which they are able to focus on long-term shelter or housing strategies. The important element in the debate is communication with the donors who are often focused on short-term relief measures. However urban areas cannot be rebuilt with only short-term interventions. The link between relief and development has to be made by a process-orientated approach focusing on capacities of local participants.
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1 September 2014
Research Article|
September 01 2014
Cordaid’s Post-Disaster Shelter Strategy in Haiti: Linking Relief and Development Available to Purchase
Kees van der Flier
Kees van der Flier
Faculty of Architecture, Technical University of Delft
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2633-9838
Print ISSN: 0168-2601
© 2014 Open House International
2014
Licensed re-use rights only.
Open House International (2014) 39 (3): 77–85.
Citation
Janse H, Flier KVD (2014), "Cordaid’s Post-Disaster Shelter Strategy in Haiti: Linking Relief and Development". Open House International, Vol. 39 No. 3 pp. 77–85, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2014-B0009
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