2018
DOI: 10.1080/23789689.2017.1418547
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State of the research in community resilience: progress and challenges

Abstract: Community resilience has been addressed across multiple disciplines including environmental sciences, engineering, sociology, psychology, and economics. Interest in community resilience gained momentum following several key natural and human-caused hazards in the United States and worldwide. To date, a comprehensive community resilience model that encompasses the performance of all the physical and socio-economic components from immediate impact through the recovery phase of a natural disaster has not been ava… Show more

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Cited by 239 publications
(123 citation statements)
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References 167 publications
(177 reference statements)
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“…However, many indicator sets are poorly balanced in terms of representing critical facets and distribution of social, economic, and environmental capital needed to maintain a community. Reviews are consistent in noting lack of representation of indicators related to natural systems with greater emphasis being placed on built systems or social systems (Sharifi, ), as well as weak integration of physical, social, and economic indicators and metrics (Koliou et al., ). Community resilience assessments use similar approaches for identification and selection of indicators to those described above for vulnerability and sustainability (Burton, ; Keck & Sakdapolrak, ; Mayunga, ; Sherrieb et al, ; Sherrieb, Norris, & Galea, ).…”
Section: Review Of Indicators and Metrics In Community Sustainable Rementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, many indicator sets are poorly balanced in terms of representing critical facets and distribution of social, economic, and environmental capital needed to maintain a community. Reviews are consistent in noting lack of representation of indicators related to natural systems with greater emphasis being placed on built systems or social systems (Sharifi, ), as well as weak integration of physical, social, and economic indicators and metrics (Koliou et al., ). Community resilience assessments use similar approaches for identification and selection of indicators to those described above for vulnerability and sustainability (Burton, ; Keck & Sakdapolrak, ; Mayunga, ; Sherrieb et al, ; Sherrieb, Norris, & Galea, ).…”
Section: Review Of Indicators and Metrics In Community Sustainable Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resilience is an evolving concept, continuing to grow in both theory and application since its original use in ecological sciences to describe a system's ability to "absorb changes of state variables, driving variables, and parameters, and still persist" (Holling, 1973). The need to better understand and evaluate complex system performance in the presence of risk and the consequences of hazards or disruptive events (natural or manmade) has contributed to a diverse body of literature that includes the fields of engineering, social science, psychology, economics, disaster mitigation, and urban planning (Hosseini, Barker, & Ramirez-Marquez, 2016;Koliou et al, 2018). Resilience is often applied as an assessment framework in the presence of disturbance (typically identified through a form of risk assessment), where emphasis is placed on system response and recovery processes for infrastructure systems and communities (Baroud, Barker, & Ramirez-Marquez, 2014;Lam, Reams, Li, Li, & Mata, 2015;Linkov, Trump, & Keisler, 2018;Tierney & Bruneau, 2007).…”
Section: Resilience: An Evolving Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
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