Knowledge exchange and public policy 2022-23
The IRDR seeks to empower all to break down barriers to global disaster risk reduction knowledge.
Knowledge exchange
Knowledge exchange is a core part of the mission of the IRDR, which it seeks to fulfil by publishing high-impact reports, engagement with the media and building long-term partnerships. IRDR members have joined and led several field missions and have contributed to multidisciplinary reports. These reports have been drawn on extensively by the UK Cabinet Office and other government bodies in advice to ministers. For example, Prof David Alexander has acted as an expert working group member of the UK Cabinet Office initiative on revision of the National Security Risk Assessment. Prof Patty Kostkova has been appointed to the Technical Advisory Group (TAG) for the development of the Strategy and Action Plan on health emergency preparedness, response, and resilience (Preparedness 2.0) in the WHO European Region.
The IRDR has close links with London First, the business representative grouping, private companies, London Resilience and UK Government, including the Cabinet Office, and is developing links with intergovernmental organisations such as the International Migration Organization, Plan International, UN Women and other humanitarian NGOs.
We run regular events to engage the public and potential partners in issues relating to risk and disaster reduction and humanitarian action, including our Annual Conference and Humanitarian Summit, masterclasses, workshops and public lecture series.
UCL delegation to Japan
Dr Punam Yadav was part of UCL delegation to Tohuku University in March 2023 together with Vice Provost of research, innovation & global engagement Professor Geraint Rees, where a letter of intent was signed by both universities. One of the key discussions at this visit was establishing a Gender Centre at their International Research Institute of Disaster Science (IRIDes) to strengthen links with the UCL IRDR Centre for Gender and Disaster. The IRDR welcomed Associate Professor Anawat Suppasri from IRIDesS as a visitor in the department until December 2023.
The visit was part of a wider programme of engagement by IRDR staff and students, that began with attendance and presentations at the World Bosai Forum and concluded with the GADRI conference in Kyoto. Here Dr Punam Yadav, Prof Peter Sammonds and Prof David Alexander were joined by other staff and PhD students Lan Li, Ava Sullivan, Xiao Han and Zahra Khan.
The UCL delegation, including Dr Yadav and Associate Professor Anawat Suppasri, with Tohuku Univerity leadership at the International Research Institute of Disaster Science (IRIDeS).
Met Office partnership
A select group of leading UK universities including UCL were selected for the Met Office Academic Partnership (MOAP), aiming to better understand the increasing impacts of extreme weather and climate change and how these affect society.
Through the partnership, UCL will build on existing projects with the Met Office by bringing together an interdisciplinary team of researchers from 12 UCL departments and centres to transform hazard and data science in weather and climate modelling to help tackle global issues.
IRDR academics, coordinated by Prof Peter Sammonds and including Dr Bayes Ahmed, Prof Fatemeh Jalayer, Dr Gianluca Pescaroli, Prof Ilan Kelman, Prof Mark Pelling, Dr Saman Ghaffarian, Dr Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson and Dr Ting Sun, will bring their interdisciplinary expertise to the discussions by leading on the Hazard to Decision Making theme.
Public policy
Image from BBC News, courtesy of UK Covid Inquiry
Prof Mark Pelling was invited to join the ESRC Environmental Social Science Strategic Advisory Group. The purpose of the ESSSAG is to provide advice to support high-level strategic oversight and development of ESRC’s portfolio of investments in the environment space. The portfolio includes climate change adaptation and mitigation, transport, land use, agriculture, economics, energy, sustainability, infrastructure, and the circular economy/waste.
Policy case study: Parental responsibility and Jade’s law
A few months later in March 2023, another two debates were held in the UK Parliament linked to the policy work and research of Dr Ayeb-Karlsson and in collaboration with the SHERA Research Group and The Hague Mothers. Dr Ayeb-Karlsson’s and the IRDR0039 student submissions for policy change in the context of child custody and violence were also cited in House of Lords and UN Special Rapporteurs on Violence Against Women and Children reports. The policy work has been widely reported on in the media including in the Guardian. On the 3rd of October 2023, the UK Government announced that they have decided to introduce Jade’s Law.
Read the UN and UK GOV policy reports citing Dr Ayeb-Karlsson’s and out students work here:- UK GOV (2022). Children and Families Act 2014: A failure of implementation. House of Lords. Children and Families Act 2014 Committee. Report of Session 2022–23. HL Paper 100. London: House of Lords. Available online:
- UNGA (2023). Custody, violence against women and violence against children. Report of the Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, its causes and consequences, Reem Alsalem. A/HRC/53/36. New York, UNGA.
- Summers, H. (2022a). Appeal court kicks out judge’s ban on police investigation. The Guardian, The Observer. 17.07.2022.
- Summers, H. (2022b). ‘Unqualified experts’ should not have role in child welfare cases, court told. The Guardian, The Observer. 13.11.2022.
- Summers, H. (2023a). Tighter regulation of psychologists in family law cases up to MPs, says senior judge. The Guardian, The Observer. 26.02.2023.
- Summers, H. (2023b). MPs call for inquiry into use of alienation claims in parental dispute. The Guardian, The Observer. 23.03.2023.
- Summers, H. and Campbell, B. (2022a). Questions over the use of ‘psychological experts’ in parental alienation cases. The Guardian, The Observer. 12.06.2022.
- Summers, H. and Campbell, B. (2022b). Parental alienation and the unregulated experts shattering children’s lives. The Guardian, The Observer. 12.06.2022.