Early Warning Systems (EWS) are among the most effective tools for reducing disaster risk and saving lives, but their impact depends on whether communities can translate warnings into timely protective action. To maximize effectiveness, early warning systems must be inclusive, addressing the specific vulnerabilities and needs of marginalized populations, who often face the highest risks yet have the least access to critical information and services.
To better understand what makes warnings actionable at the community level, the IFRC Global Disaster Preparedness Center (GDPC) supported 15 studies across 14 countries, focusing on last-mile communities—groups that are geographically isolated, socially marginalized, or otherwise difficult to reach. These studies examined the barriers and enabling factors that influence whether warnings are received, understood, and acted upon.
The findings reveal that breakdowns in EWS often occur not because warnings do not exist, but because they fail to provide clear, trusted, and actionable guidance. This gap is frequently due to insufficient engagement with the very populations these systems aim to protect. Effective EWS require attention across all four core pillars: disaster risk knowledge, hazard monitoring and forecasting, warning dissemination, and preparedness to respond.
Disaster risk knowledge is shaped by lived experience, cultural and Indigenous knowledge, and is critical to understanding and responding to hazards. When communities are not engaged in sharing or building this knowledge, they may underestimate risks or lack vital information. Hazard monitoring and forecasting, while improving in quality, often remain too technical for immediate use. Blending scientific outputs with community-defined indicators and plain, impact-focused communication increases relevance and trust.
Warning dissemination and communication must be timely, accessible, and understandable. Overly generic alerts or technical jargon reduce comprehension. Multi-channel, multilingual, and redundant communication, combined with clear instructions for action, ensures broader reach and effectiveness. Preparedness to respond requires that people have the time, resources, and confidence to act. Pre-agreed actions, basic resources such as transport or cash, and practiced roles for local groups help translate warnings into protective measures.
The GDPC report emphasizes the importance of inclusivity, accessibility, and actionability in designing EWS. Communities should be co-designers and co-owners of systems, integrating Indigenous and traditional knowledge with scientific forecasts and establishing feedback mechanisms to improve systems over time. Accessibility can be enhanced through multi-channel dissemination strategies, clear messaging in local languages, and investments in last-mile infrastructure like community radios and solar-powered backup systems.
Actionable systems provide context-specific guidance, foster trust through consistency and accountability, link warnings to anticipatory action programs offering financial and material resources, and ensure adequate lead time for people to take protective measures. Public education campaigns, school-based programs, and community drills strengthen preparedness and create a sustained culture of risk reduction.
The evidence from these studies underscores that last-mile challenges are not purely technical—they are social and institutional. Inclusive EWS succeed when last-mile populations are treated as first-mile partners: active decision-makers and knowledge holders. Systems are most effective when built on trust, meaningful participation across all pillars of EWS, and resources that enable protective action. Aligning policies and investments with these principles is essential for achieving universal coverage and ensuring that early warnings truly save lives.







