Surrogate indicators for assessing community resilience
Data(s) |
2013
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Resumo |
The importance of community resilience to natural disasters is being increasingly recognised. This paper presents an approach for the development of surrogate indicators for comprehensive assessment of community resilience, which is crucial in the context of predicted increase in natural disasters resulting from extreme weather events due to climate change. The use of surrogate indicators is advocated because a comprehensive assessment of community resilience across various thematic areas and associated key areas requires the measurement of a large number of resilience indicators which is not always feasible due to time and resource constraints, To overcome this, researchers tend to use secondary data sources, which are easily available but not always reliable. This highlights the need for surrogate indicators that are easy to measure from reliable primary data sources and are adequate to capture the resilience of a community. Firstly, the paper discusses the two approaches for defining and conceptualising community resilience and the need to account for the complex interrelationships between thematic areas, key areas and resilience indicators and their implications for research. Secondly, a comprehensive framework for the assessment of community resilience is proposed and the difficulties associated with the measurement of overall resilience of the community are discussed. Thirdly, the paper explains a two-step approach to develop surrogate indicators highlighting the necessity and challenges associated with it. Finally, the proposed approach is elaborated with a simple example for better understanding. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
University of Salford |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63404/1/Surrogate_indicators_for_assessing_community_resilience.pdf http://www.buildresilience.org/2013/ Ziyath, Abdul M., Teo, Melissa, & Goonetilleke, Ashantha (2013) Surrogate indicators for assessing community resilience. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Building Resilience 2013: Individual, Institutional and Societal Coping Strategies to Address the Challenges Associated with Disaster Risk, University of Salford, Ahungalla, Sri Lanka. |
Direitos |
Copyright 2013 University of Salford, Centre for Disaster Resilience |
Fonte |
School of Civil Engineering & Built Environment; School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Science & Engineering Faculty |
Palavras-Chave | #090500 CIVIL ENGINEERING #090505 Infrastructure Engineering and Asset Management #129999 Built Environment and Design not elsewhere classified #resilience indicators #adaptive capacity #composite indicator #resilience framework #community resilience |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |