2015
DOI: 10.1111/jfr3.12216
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The RISPOSTA procedure for the collection, storage and analysis of high quality, consistent and reliable damage data in the aftermath of floods

Abstract: Despite the perceived abundance of information collected after a disaster, available\ud data furnish a narrow picture of flood impacts, or they are difficult to\ud compare so as to produce an integrated interpretation of flood events. This is\ud due to the diversity of the purposes for which data are collected and the variety\ud of stakeholders involved in data collection and management. The RISPOSTA\ud procedure addresses the need for standardised ways to collect flood damage data\ud and to create consistent … Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 10 publications
(16 reference statements)
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“…Damage calculations are carried out within the RASOR platform (Silvestro et al, 2016;Rudari and RASOR TEAM, 2015;Koudogbo et al, 2014). It is widely acknowledged 80 that a flood damage estimation without validation against local historical loss data may sound weak (Ballio et al, 2015). Unfortunately for the presented case study such data are not available.…”
Section: Expected Annual Damage (Ead)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Damage calculations are carried out within the RASOR platform (Silvestro et al, 2016;Rudari and RASOR TEAM, 2015;Koudogbo et al, 2014). It is widely acknowledged 80 that a flood damage estimation without validation against local historical loss data may sound weak (Ballio et al, 2015). Unfortunately for the presented case study such data are not available.…”
Section: Expected Annual Damage (Ead)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A description of the complete flood scenario is beyond the scope of the paper. Interested readers can refer to the Supplement; moreover, a report is available for Italian speakers (Ballio et al, 2015). Rather, the scenario is used here to demonstrate how the information structure proposed by our model (i.e., the five logical axes) supports an integrated interpretation of the flood event that, in its turn, meets the requirements of a consistent forensic investigation among other possible uses.…”
Section: Enhanced Experiences Of Disaster Damage Data Collection and mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, a good coverage of required data is observed thanks to the implementation of the RISPOSTA procedure for data collection (Molinari et al, 2014a;Ballio et al, 2015), which has been developed to feed the damage model proposed in this paper with data. Table 2 also shows some problems of data availability, due to the difficulty of obtaining them from some segments of the private sector (like in the case of some infrastructures) and due to the incompleteness of information related to some indirect and intangible damage (like damage to people and environment).…”
Section: Enhanced Experiences Of Disaster Damage Data Collection and mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Frequently, the lack of data on losses induces experts to define synthetic stage-damage functions with poor validation. That is why there is a general agreement in the scientific community that damage data should be systematically collected and interpreted in order to better assess ex ante potential losses [19]. Transferability of vulnerability functions is also debated since building features and typologies change significantly from country to country (or regions) [20].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%