2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2022.102901
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Residents’ satisfaction in post-disaster permanent housing: Beneficiaries vs. non-beneficiaries

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Cited by 15 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Correspondingly, this could be due to the absence of livelihood opportunities, and a lack of social, cultural, and environmental activities that need to be addressed, particularly for the bigger family size. This finding is supported by Kamacl-Karahan et al [31] on post-disaster housing where the environment in the neighborhood and social ties were identified to contribute to the residents' satisfaction. The United Nations Office of the Disaster Risk and Reduction [22] also identified in their findings that livelihood activities are vital in the resettlement of disaster victims.…”
Section: Level Of Satisfaction Of Beneficiaries On Yolanda Permanent ...supporting
confidence: 60%
“…Correspondingly, this could be due to the absence of livelihood opportunities, and a lack of social, cultural, and environmental activities that need to be addressed, particularly for the bigger family size. This finding is supported by Kamacl-Karahan et al [31] on post-disaster housing where the environment in the neighborhood and social ties were identified to contribute to the residents' satisfaction. The United Nations Office of the Disaster Risk and Reduction [22] also identified in their findings that livelihood activities are vital in the resettlement of disaster victims.…”
Section: Level Of Satisfaction Of Beneficiaries On Yolanda Permanent ...supporting
confidence: 60%
“…Maslow's hierarchy of needs theory also emphasized the need for housing as the first and primary place in the natural order of need fulfillment: physiological requirements, safety needs, social needs, recognition and respect needs, and self-fulfillment needs [32]. On one hand, housing satisfaction is defined as the sense of contentment felt by occupants due to the difference between expected and actual housing circumstances [33]. On the other hand, housing satisfaction is determined by Riazi and Emami [34] as the proximity of people's desired housing to their current residence and the quality of the environment.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The neighborhood environment is seen as the most significant indicator of residential contentment; this comprises estate management and service features, security and safety, proximity to the job, and social networks [11,33,46]. Available jobs determine neighborhood contentment [5,47], and longer work commutes are linked to dissatisfaction [7,10,48].…”
Section: Neighborhood Environment (Ne)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on the interrelations and the feedback, the ANP allows the calculation of the overall importance of criteria and the overall perspective level of every sub-factor [37,38]. The final step involves evaluating the user perspective level for a sustainable building using the user responses collected on a 5-point Likert scale: very dissatisfied, dissatisfied, medium, satisfied, and very satisfied [39][40][41]. In this regard, the users' perspective levels are demonstrated in the form of fuzzy membership functions to simulate the uncertainties linked with experts' judgements.…”
Section: Research Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%