2. Session outputs
• A review of main practices, tools and methods used by
practitioners, including ones that have not worked and
are not useful
• Gaps in practice (including tools/methods, approaches,
policy advocacy) that need to be addressed in effective
ecosystem management for DRR
• A review of key challenges and solutions to
implementation
3. 4 questions, 4 groups
Tools and practices applied for integrating DRR
and ecosystem management
i. What worked and what didn’t work?
ii. What were the driving forces and who were
the main actors?
iii. What were the main processes and main
outcomes?
iv. What is the « perfect » project ?
4. Practices
Aristotle held that there were three basic
activities of man: theoria, to which the end goal
was truth, poiesis to which the end goal was
production and praxis, to which the end goal was
action. He also distinguished between eupraxia
(good praxis) and dyspraxia (bad praxis,
misfortune).
5. Methods/
Approaches
A method is a means or manner of procedure,
especially a regular and systematic way of
accomplishing something: e.g. a simple method
for making a pie crust
6. Tools
A tool is a device that can be used to produce or
achieve something, but that is not consumed
in the process.
7. Perfect
The word "perfection" derives from the Latin
"perfectio", and "perfect" — from "perfectus."
These expressions in turn come from "perficio“
"to finish", "to bring to an end."
"Perfectio(n)" thus literally means "a finishing",
and "perfect(us)" — "finished", much as in
grammatical parlance ("perfect").
8. Format
« Market place »
• Four different « workstations » and themes, set
of questions and facilitator.
• Groups of 8-10 persons.
• 30 minutes per market place