Abstract

This article establishes existing knowledge on earthquakes and coping mechanisms employed in reducing the severity of adverse impacts caused by an earthquake disaster in a specific locality. The purpose of the study was to recommend useful measures for disaster risk management. It also more particularly aimed at assessing mechanisms employed in reducing the disaster risk and integrating knowledge of disasters and hazards in primary and secondary school curricula. The study was carried out in Rungwe Volcanic Province in Rungwe District, Tanzania, and included recording people’s attitudes towards earthquake disaster and locations of schools. It employed focus group discussions, public hearings and interviews in order to capture the actual situation relating to risk and vulnerability assessments by the community. The study revealed high levels of risk and vulnerability to the impact of earthquakes on the part of the community, who accepted earthquakes as a normal phenomenon and therefore did not employ special measures to reduce the impact. The study showed that the community’s coping mechanisms and the extent to which disaster management knowledge has been integrated in school curricula are inadequate in addressing earthquake disasters. It is thus recommended that traditional and modern technologies be integrated in curricula and later in sustainable practices; such technologies include the belief in ‘Nyifwila’, traditional housing style and wooden housing, and non-structural planning for disaster risk management.

Highlights

  • The Great East Africa Rift Valley System in general and Rungwe Volcanic Province (RVP) in particular have frequently experienced earthquakes that claim human lives, properties and environmental resources

  • The 1955 quake that mostly destroyed public offices in Tukuyu in RVP remains in the memory of those who experienced it

  • This section presents analyses and discusses disaster risk management in the study area. It analyses and discusses levels of community awareness of earthquake disaster and coping mechanisms pertaining to the disaster

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Summary

Introduction

The Great East Africa Rift Valley System in general and Rungwe Volcanic Province (RVP) in particular have frequently experienced earthquakes that claim human lives, properties and environmental resources. The 1955 quake that mostly destroyed public offices in Tukuyu in RVP remains in the memory of those who experienced it. The recent earthquake of 2001/2002 that destroyed schools, individual houses and some infrastructure drew a great deal of attention from different stakeholders (Pan African News Agency 2001; Mwamunyange et al 2001). The October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan is a typical example, where over 17 000 children died when their schools collapsed whilst they were attending classes (Wisner 2006). When children are well prepared to deal with such disasters they can save their lives and the lives of members of their community (Wisner 2006)

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