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Measuring community disaster resilience at local levels: An adaptable resilience framework

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Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102358

Keywords

Resilience frameworks; Community; Disaster management; Systems thinking

Funding

  1. Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF)
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/PO28543/1]
  3. EPSRC [EP/P028543/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Decision makers, practitioners and community members must evaluate disaster resilience and understand natural hazard risks, but face challenges in defining and measuring resilience. This paper develops an adaptable resilience framework based on literature review, aiming to provide a better understanding of community resilience tailored to stakeholder needs.
Decision makers, practitioners and community members need to assess the disaster resilience of their communities and to understand better the risks they face from natural hazards. There is a lack of consensus on what resilience means and how it can be measured as each stakeholder potentially brings a different perspective to understanding community disaster resilience. The paper will identify the key features and characteristics of Community Disaster Resilience (CDR) frameworks from the literature to develop a resilience framework that can be adapted and customised according to stakeholder needs. The paper used a 5-step process to develop an adaptable CDR framework. First, a review of 36 resilience frameworks was conducted to identify key features and characteristics of resilience frameworks. In Steps 2 and 3, a matrix of indicators and measures was populated by resilience dimensions covered in the current CDR literature reviewed. Subsequently, the indicators were sorted for similarities and duplicates were removed. Finally, they were clustered by six critical resilience dimensions (i. e. Physical, Health, Economic, Environmental, Social and Governance) into a library of 86 resilience indicators (composed of 360 measures) that can be used to operationalise a CDR framework according to the needs of the stakeholders. The review indicated that majority of the articles selected use objective approaches to measure resilience showing a gap for more frameworks using subjective, or participatory, approaches to measuring community resilience. An adaptable CDR framework may make resilience assessment more grounded in local stakeholder perspectives and lead to a better understanding of community resilience.

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