Resilient Communities in Disasters and Emergencies: Exploring their Characteristics †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The ability of a system, community, or society exposed to hazards to resist, absorb, accommodate to and recover from the effects of a hazard in a timely and efficient manner, including through the preservation and restoration of its basic structures and functions.[1]
2. Materials and Methods
3. Resilience
3.1. Characteristics of Resilient Communities
- Organizational flexibility. Responding to unexpected events, local social, economic, and governmental organizations innovate and repurpose their activities and resources so that they address community needs in new and unexpected ways;
- Leadership. Individuals step forward to define community problems that must be addressed. They are respected by community members so their advice is accepted and they are skilled at supporting subgroups as they emerge;
- Community Learning and Collective problem solving. Resilience involves bottom-up organizing, social learning, and a capacity of residents to recognize social assets and to take action to put them to use. Some communities have experienced similar disasters in the past and from this experience they have learned new and better ways to respond;
- Cooperation and collaboration. Strong local social networks where people trust each other and give each other emotional support are important. It also is important for local people to have ties to people outside of their locality, to leaders of nearby communities where they have established arrangements for working together. They also need network ties to people situated in vertical networks, working in organizations that serve larger units of population aggregation;
- Social capital. This generally refers to dense social networks wherein participants have reciprocal relationships of exchange that over time allow them to build up mutual trust and relationships they can use to accomplish personal and social goals. We treat this as a quality of the whole social and political field in which the community exists. Each of the elements of resilient communities listed here grows out of processes that build social capital and they rely on the elements of social capital—bonding social capital, bridging social capital, and linking social capital—being interconnected and supporting each other;
- Engagement with institutions situated beyond the community. Most disasters require more resources than are available locally, so help from government or large NGOs is necessary. Large outside organizations tend to be blind to local culture and local people tend to not know how to interact well with large outside organizations. In resilient communities, the two sides interact well.
3.2. Social Capital
4. Managing the Development of Social Capital to Enhance Resilience
4.1. Organizational Flexibility
4.2. Leadership
4.3. Community Learning and Collective Problem Solving
4.4. Cooperation and Collaboration
4.5. Social Capital Development
4.6. Engaging Outside Institutions
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | “Disaster” and “emergency” are complex concepts with many definitions, ones that have been evolving over time. Perry, R.W. Defining Disaster: An Evolving Concept. In Handbook of Disaster Research; Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research; Rodríguez, H., Donner, W., Trainor, J., Eds.; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63254-4_1. For purposes of this paper, we use the term “crisis” rather than ‘disasters and emergencies’; by which we mean an event or a situation that creates severe damage to an area and many people are affected. |
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Milofsky, C. Resilient Communities in Disasters and Emergencies: Exploring their Characteristics. Societies 2023, 13, 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080188
Milofsky C. Resilient Communities in Disasters and Emergencies: Exploring their Characteristics. Societies. 2023; 13(8):188. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080188
Chicago/Turabian StyleMilofsky, Carl. 2023. "Resilient Communities in Disasters and Emergencies: Exploring their Characteristics" Societies 13, no. 8: 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080188
APA StyleMilofsky, C. (2023). Resilient Communities in Disasters and Emergencies: Exploring their Characteristics. Societies, 13(8), 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080188