“…Over the last decade, different studies and initiatives have been developed to propose indicators of community resilience to disasters (ALSHEHRI et al, 2015a,b;COX;HAMLEN, 2015;CUTTER et al, 2008CUTTER et al, , 2010EMBRACE, 2018;FRAZIER et al, 2013;TWIGG, 2009;YOON et al, 2016). Most only consider disasters associated to natural threats, even though many risks of contemporary life are related to human activities, such as migrations that spread epidemics or failures in industrial production, transportation and power generation which result in technological disasters (GÜNTHER et al, 2017;RODRIGUES et al, 2015). Cutter et al (2008) conceived the conceptual framework Disaster Resilience of Place (DROP), in which community resilience corresponds to a dynamic process dependent on preceding conditions, disaster severity, time in between hazardous occurrences and influence of factors external to the communities.…”