This factsheet summarizes the role of Building Regulations for Resilience (BRR) in Fragile, Conflict, and Violence (FCV) contexts, where climate and disaster risks intensify existing socioeconomic vulnerabilities. It reviews World Bank operations in FCV-designated countries from FY2011–FY2023 and GFDRR support in FY2021–FY2024. Key insights highlight the co-benefits of resilient construction: stronger governance transparency, reduced economic losses, continuity of livelihoods and services, and safe shelter during emergencies. Implementation challenges include institutional fragility, weak enforcement capacity, security constraints, and limited fiscal space. Portfolio statistics indicate that from FY2011–FY2023 the World Bank committed 929 million dollars across 38 projects in 31 FCV countries to resilient construction; 98 percent (910 million dollars) financed physical infrastructure, while 2 percent (18.8 million dollars) supported regulations and guidelines. In FY2021–FY2024, GFDRR allocated 17.9 million dollars to FCV countries, with 3.6 million dollars focused on the built environment. Operational implications for the World Bank include balancing investments between infrastructure and the foundational regulatory frameworks; strengthening code development, enforcement, and institutional capacity; and tailoring BRR interventions to FCV realities through phased, context-specific approaches that safeguard resilience gains over time.