Differentiate the risk factors underlying disaster
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The risk factors underlying disaster are:
- Disasters are the large scale destruction of the environment, organisms, air quality etc.
- Disasters can be man-made and natural.
- Natural disasters force people to displace from their habitat and source of livelihood.
- Animals are most affected by this and the death of individuals and organisms occurs in disaster.
- A disaster such as a flood removes the topsoil of the ground and makes the land infertile and causes soil erosion.
- Disaster causes huge loses and increases poverty and climate change.
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Underlying disaster includes poverty, climate change, variability and inequality, accidental and rapid urbanization and the absence of disaster risk considerations in land management and environmental natural resource management as well as compounding factors such as none disaster risk-informed policies, demographic change, the lack of legislation and incentives for the limited availability of technology, private disaster risk reduction investment, complex supply chains, unsustainable uses of natural resources, pandemics, epidemics and declining ecosystem.
Underlying disaster includes poverty, climate change, variability and inequality, accidental and rapid urbanization and the absence of disaster risk considerations in land management and environmental natural resource management as well as compounding factors such as none disaster risk-informed policies, demographic change, the lack of legislation and incentives for the limited availability of technology, private disaster risk reduction investment, complex supply chains, unsustainable uses of natural resources, pandemics, epidemics and declining ecosystem.
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