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Risks and uncertainties in vulnerable contexts: the Brazilian experience

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Title: Risks and uncertainties in vulnerable contexts: the Brazilian experience


1
Risks and uncertainties in vulnerable contexts
the Brazilian experience
  • Marcelo Firpo Porto
  • Study Center of WorkersHealth and Human Ecology
  • National School of Public Health
  • Oswaldo Cruz Foundation
  • Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2
The concept of vulnerability
  • Origins study of disasters. The concept of
    vulnerability is usually understood as opposite
    to the concepts of resilience (Eng. Approach),
    integrity or health (Environm. or Public Health
    Approaches).
  • It concerns in understanding how theoretically
    similar natural or technological systems can
    produce differentials in risk events that affect
    certain social groups, territories and
    ecosystems.
  • Unifying concept based on the systems theory.
    Risks under vulnerable contexts cannot be
    understood or solved by a normal scientific
    analysis. It reinforces the need of
    transdisciplinary/integrated approaches and the
    inclusion of social and institutional contexts
    within Risk Analysis in understanding complex
    socio-technical systems and their impacts.
  • Using as references the contributions from the
    studies of disasters and political ecology, we
    understand vulnerable contexts related not only
    to different sorts of restrictions (economic,
    technological, human and legal), but
    fundamentally to the concentration of political
    and economic power.
  • The extra vulnerability of industrializing
    countries to environmental problems and
    industrial accidents specially in regions like
    Latin America, Asia and Africa.
  • LA combines mechanisms of patrimonialism
    (private appropriation of public goods by the
    elite), populism (exchange of privileges by means
    of workers co-optation by the governments) and
    exclusion (the process of denying the citizenship
    status and social rights to the
    poorest/discriminated people). As a consequence,
    the region presents a strongly authoritarian
    political culture and the worst income
    distribution in the world.

3
Vulnerable Contexts
  • Socio-political, economic, cultural and
    institutional processes constitute a field of
    mutual influence in producing vulnerabilities
    that
  • (i) reproduce socially vulnerable groups which
    are discriminated and often invisible for
    decision-making processes (marginalized workers
    and their families, poor communities around
    hazardous plants, other discriminated groups
    according ethnic, race or gender)
  • (ii) make worse the cycles of risks and
    associated uncertainties
  • generation (regulation of new hazardous STS's)
  • exposure (preventioncontrol of existent risk
    situations)
  • effects (mitigation of consequences after risk
    events)
  • (iii) enable high conflictive forums between
    stakeholders in discussing and regulating risks
    (e.g. violent disputes and institutional
    vulnerabilities)
  • (iv) block the mechanisms of collective learning
    (e.g. through authoritarian organizations).
  • The outcome is a systemic production of risk
    events as contaminations, illness and deaths,
    even in more simple systems, which would not,
    or at least not so intensively, occur in the
    absence of vulnerabilities.

4

TYPES OF UNCERTAINTY (Funtowics Ravetz) EXAMPLES OF INTENSIFICATION IN VULNERABLE CONTEXTS
Technical Uncertainties (Inexactness) Several risks have no specific legislation Limited infrastructure for risk measurement Inexistence of Data Bases, especially for groups with less economicpolitical power No recognition of some exposed areas and (vulnerable) groups, which remain invisible and sometimes appear with epidemic cases of contamination or major disasters/accidents No/Poor/Inadequated information about risks (e.g. use of pesticides for illiterate rural workers)
Metodological Uncertainties (Unreliability) Limited qualified human resources Fragmented action of different institutions and stakeholders Difficulties of affected groups in order to participate, understand and reply official or private assessments or accident investigations No clear presentation of levels of confidence Political / economical use of optimisticestimations
Epistemological Uncertainties (Ignorance) Inexistence of (indepent) experts for complex technological hazards difficults recognition of epistemological uncertainties Attempts in assuming (irreducible or reducible) ignorance as more simple methodological problems that will be solved by technical-scientific expertise Two possibilities no public discussions (reduced to closed expert/institutional circles) or high conflictive/polarized discussions between risk creators and institutions with no reliable assessments and affected groups and NGOs oft without technical analysis but with situated/local knowledge
5
VULNERABLE CONTEXTS AND THE CYCLE OF HAZARDS
  • GENERATION
  • Social (Re)production of Vulnerable Groups
  • Restricted Regulation
  • Multiplication of Dangerous Socio-Technical
    Systems
  • Unequal Spatial Distribution of Hazards (in the
    Peripheries)
  • EXPOSURE
  • Inadequate prevention of risks
  • Propagation of failures and dysfunctions
  • Enlargement of exposure to risk situation
  • OUTCOMES
  • Limited mitigation (e.g. emergency planning
    and health care) Systemic production of
    accidents, diseases and contaminations
  • Blockade of mechanisms of collective learning
  • (organizations and society)

6
VULNERABILITY, INDUSTRIAL HAZARDS AND
SOCIO-TECHNICAL SYSTEMS
7
MODEL OF VULNERABILITY FOR INDUSTRIAL MAJOR
HAZARDS IN INDUSTRIALISING COUNTRIES (adap.
Horlick-Jones, 1993)
8
A Brazilian experience with Industrial Major
Accidents
  • Brazil no regulations such as the Seveso
    Directive in European Communities and the
    Emergency Planning and Right-to-Know in the USA
  • Weakness of regulatory institutional
    strategies location of hazardous facilities and
    land-use planning, risk analysis, emergency
    planning and the dissemination of information
    among community members and workers and
    populations on risks.
  • Vulnerability and social relations of labor
    labor turnover and unqualified workers
    (subcontracted) under authoritarian organizations
    increase failures, no participative risk
    assessments or accident investigations.
  • Vulnerable population living in the peripheries
    highly populated in chaotically urbanized areas
    around hazardous industries is the most important
    factor in increasing the number of deaths (1984
    Bhopal with 2500 Mexico with 550 and Vila
    Socó/Cubatão with 508)
  • No existence or feasibleness of emercency
    preparedness plann in areas with slums.
  • Economic vulnerability increase of equipments
    process degradation and failures

9
A case of chemical accident in Brazil
  • PVC/Chorine Factory in Northeast Brazil (the most
    important of the city)
  • Leakage of caustic soda (150o C) through the
    breaking of a valve provoked one death and one
    serious injured worker
  • High conflictive and violent local/institutional
    culture, with continuous threats (including
    murder)
  • Industry changed the local and possible proofs
    after the accident before the first official
    inspection, and published a report concluding
    that human errors were the main causes.
  • Oficcial of Ministry of Labor was under pressure
    and the Union asked Public Prosecutors Office
    and our Institution for helping. Workers pled
    that only a worker who wanted consciously to
    suicide could make this kind of error, and
    probably it was not the case.
  • Testimonies of workers in the police station was
    assisted by the industrys director, who was a
    closely friend of the police chief
  • Parallel accident investigation showed important
    organizational underlying causes (maintenance,
    protection equipments, trainning, intense
    personal downsizing) and indicated a possible
    rupture of the valve without human error.
  • The second worker, who was expected to die,
    survived and confirmed the suspicions of the
    parallell report
  • Two years after the director who was the
    reponsible for the accident investigation was
    fired and structural changes in risk management
    were improved, although limited and with relative
    high conflictive relationships (with institutions
    and union)

10
Some Conclusions
  • The points bellow is suggestions from the point
    of view of integrated assessment to research
    teams and institutional policies in
    industrializing countries under vulnerable
    contexts
  • To organize different levels of possible
    interventions in a systemic way, linking global
    and local strategies from structural policies to
    institutional practices and actions of local
    social actors - e.g. regulatory agencies,
    industries, workers, populations in hazardous
    areas
  • A better understanding of the limits and
    uncertainties of local and normal scientific
    diagnosis and proposals
  • Mapping of vulnerable groups, economic sectors
    and territories in order also to make them more
    visible to society and institutions
  • Empowerment of vulnerable groups as an important
    strategy for research teams and institutions in a
    dialectic way of changing society, science and
    institutions together
  • Use of participative methodologies are
    fundamental in order to improve democracry and
    empowerment of vulnerable, oft invisible
    groups
  • To contextualize the understanding of industrial
    hazards within the needs and priorities of
    vulnerable populations, developing new forms of
    dialogues and risk communication with poor and
    low formal educated people, creating
    possibilities of reciprocal exchanges between lay
    and scientific knowledge
  • Supporting environmental justice issues as a
    political/institutional strategy in order to
    reduce social vulnerabilities.
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