4.6 Article

Understanding the role of individual- and community-based resources in disaster preparedness

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103882

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Disaster preparedness; Social capital; Asset-based; Readiness; Resilience; Earthquakes

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This study examines how shared resources, social capital, and day-to-day resources influence earthquake disaster preparedness. It finds that in areas with a racial majority, reported preparedness is higher when considering shared resources. Disaster preparedness efforts should focus on supplementing individual preparedness with daily resources, social capital, and collective shareable community assets.
Standard emergency management practice in the U.S measures disaster preparedness as an individual household attribute based on amounts of stocked supplies, hazard mitigation actions, and emergency planning. Such measures generally fail to consider how norms of trust, fairness, and reciprocity, as well as networks of social relationships-that is, social capital-can facilitate coordination and enable sharing and communal action in the face of disaster. Our study assesses how shared resources, social capital, and day-to-day resources (specifically, food and water) could influence earthquake disaster preparedness across different communities. Using Seattle as the site of investigation, the study involved a split-ballot experiment embedded in a mail survey of a random sample of households. These households were stratified by zip codes selected for their contrasting demographics (N = 1340). Half of the households in each zip code answered conventional individualistic measures of disaster preparedness, while the other half answered questions regarding resources they, their family, friends, and neighbors might share. In racialmajority-dominated zip codes, reported preparedness was higher when people were asked to consider shared resources. Disaster preparedness also appeared to be underestimated with the traditional measure. Households with greater bridging social capital (connections with individuals who differ in their social identity but who may share some similar interests) and longer neighborhood tenure also reported higher preparedness. Our findings suggest disaster preparedness efforts should focus on supplementing individual preparedness with daily resources, social capital, and collective shareable community assets-a focus that we call mainstreaming.

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