In the first episode of the Tomorrow’s Cities Podcast, dedicated to the International Day for Disaster Reduction, we talked with Professor Mark Pelling, Professor of Risk and Disaster Reduction and Tomorrow’s Cities Director, Thaísa Comelli, Social Sciences Lead in Tomorrow’s Cities and Postdoctoral Research Associate both from the Institute of Risk and Disaster Reduction at University College London, and Tanvi Deshpande, Research Fellow and London Scholl of Economics and Political Science. In our conversation we explored how Tomorrow’s Cities Hub is working actively across several cities in the Global South to foster inclusive disaster risk reduction.
In the second episode of Tomorrow’s Cities Podcast, we’ve spoken to Dr. Emin Mentese. Emin is an Urban Planning, Exposure Modelling and Geographic Information Systems expert working at the Boğaziçi University, Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute in Istanbul. He holds a PhD from the Istanbul Technical University and he’s the Visioning Scenario Development Lead and Istanbul Co-Lead. In our conversation we discussed how urban planning has evolved in the last 15 years and the importance of involving communities in the urban decision making process.
In this episode we talked to Dr. Gemma Cremen from University College London and Professor Jeremy Philips from the University of Bristol on how community knowledge paired with state-of-the-art physics based computational modelling is helping to shape more inclusive and effective natural-hazard risk reduction policies.
In this episode, our conversation was at the crossroads of technical work and policy making. Together with Dr. Max Hope, Michel Wahome and Ekin Ekici, we discussed how to transform technical knowledge and scientific data into real-world impact that enables meaningful change in our urban landscapes.
Communicating risk, particularly future risk, is challenging. In Tomorrow’s Cities, we’ve devised an interactive approach to empower participants to understand how different urban configurations and policy choices can either aggravate or mitigate disaster risk.
In this episode, we’re joined by Roberto Gentile, lecturer in Catastrophe Risk Modelling at University College London and Tomorrow’s Cities Risk Agreement Lead, and Karim Aljawhari, a Post-doctoral Research Fellow also at University College London and a member of the Tomorrow’s Cities Nablus team.
They shared insights and experiences in communicating risk to diverse audiences and discuss strategies to enhance public understanding of risk.