Risk Assessment and Vulnerability Analysis - Defining Danger Zones
- Hazard: A potentially damaging physical event, phenomenon, or human activity that may cause loss of life, injury, property damage, social and economic disruption, or environmental degradation.
- Vulnerability: Conditions determined by physical, social, economic, and environmental factors or processes which increase the susceptibility of an individual, a community, assets or systems to the impacts of hazards.
- Capacity: The combination of all strengths, attributes, and resources available within an organization, community, or society to manage and reduce disaster risks and strengthen resilience.
- Risk: The probability of harmful consequences, or expected losses (deaths, injuries, property, livelihoods, economic activity disrupted or environmental damage) resulting from interactions between natural or human-induced hazards and vulnerable conditions.
- Formula: $Risk = (Hazard \times Vulnerability) / Capacity$
- Risk Assessment: A methodology to determine the nature and extent of risk by analyzing potential hazards and evaluating existing conditions of vulnerability that could pose a potential threat or harm to people, property, livelihoods, and the environment on which they depend.
- Vulnerability Analysis: Identifies who and what is vulnerable to specific hazards, to what extent, and why.
- Danger Zones (Hazard Mapping): Geographic demarcation of areas based on their exposure to specific hazards and assessed risk levels. Crucial for land-use planning, mitigation measures, and emergency preparedness.

⭐ Vulnerability is multi-dimensional and not solely determined by poverty; it also encompasses social exclusion, lack of access to information and services, and inadequate physical infrastructure or environmental mismanagement.
Risk Assessment and Vulnerability Analysis - Sizing Up Threats
Systematic process to identify hazards, analyze their potential impact, and evaluate the significance of risks. Essential for prioritizing disaster preparedness efforts.
- Core Equation: $Risk = Hazard \times Vulnerability / Capacity$
- Key Components:
- Hazard: Potential event causing harm (e.g., flood, chemical spill).
- Vulnerability: Susceptibility to harm (e.g., weak infrastructure, poverty).
- Types: Physical, Social, Economic, Environmental.
- Capacity: Resources and abilities to manage risks (e.g., early warning systems, healthcare).
Process Flow:
⭐ Risk assessment helps determine acceptable levels of risk and informs decisions on mitigation measures.
Risk Assessment and Vulnerability Analysis - Who's Most Exposed?
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Risk Assessment: Identifies hazards, analyzes risks.
- $Risk = Hazard \times Vulnerability \div Capacity$
- Steps: Hazard ID, Vulnerability & Capacity Assessment.
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Vulnerability Analysis: Susceptibility to hazard's damaging effects.
- Identifies who is most exposed & why; factors ↑ing susceptibility.
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Types of Vulnerability:
Type Key Aspects Physical Unsafe location (e.g., floodplains), poor infrastructure/housing. Social Age extremes (children, elderly), disability, gender, social exclusion. Economic Poverty, unemployment, reliance on single/sensitive livelihoods. Environmental Resource degradation (soil, water), pollution, climate change impacts. -
Key Vulnerable Groups: Children <5 yrs, elderly >65 yrs, pregnant, disabled, chronically ill, poor, isolated populations.
⭐ Children & elderly are often most affected in disasters due to unique physiological & dependency needs.
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Risk Assessment and Vulnerability Analysis - Charting the Course
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Risk Assessment: Systematic, quantitative/qualitative process: identify hazards, analyze likelihood & impact, evaluate risks.
- Formula: $Risk = Hazard \times Vulnerability$ or $Risk = Likelihood \times Impact$.
- Key Steps:
- Hazard Identification: What can happen? (nature, intensity, frequency of e.g., earthquakes, floods)
- Vulnerability Assessment: Who/what is exposed, susceptible & why.
- Capacity Assessment: Strengths & resources to cope.
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Vulnerability Analysis: Identifies community/system/asset susceptibility to hazard effects.
- Types:
- Physical: Infrastructure, buildings, critical facilities.
- Social: Poverty, age, gender, health status.
- Economic: Livelihoods, assets, business continuity.
- Environmental: Ecosystem health, natural resource depletion.
- Types:
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Risk Matrix: Visual tool prioritizing risks by likelihood & impact.
Likelihood↓ / Impact→ Minor Moderate Major Catastrophic Rare Low Low Med Med Unlikely Low Low-Med Med High Possible Low-Med Med High High Likely Med Med-High High Extreme Almost Certain Med-High High Extreme Extreme -
Prioritization: Guides resource allocation for effective DRR & preparedness.
⭐ HVCA (Hazard, Vulnerability, Capacity Assessment) is a key participatory community-level tool.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Risk is the probability of loss from a hazard interacting with vulnerable conditions.
- Key formula: Risk = Hazard × Vulnerability / Capacity; lower capacity ↑ risk.
- Hazard identification pinpoints potential threats (natural/man-made).
- Vulnerability analysis assesses susceptibility based on physical, social, economic, and environmental factors.
- Capacity assessment evaluates resources and coping abilities of the community.
- Risk assessment quantifies risks to prioritize mitigation and preparedness efforts.
- Vulnerability is often highest in marginalized populations and areas with poor infrastructure_
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