Community Disaster Recovery
Moving from Vulnerability to Resilience
£25.99
Part of Organizations and the Natural Environment
- Authors:
- Deserai A. Crow, University of Colorado, Denver
- Elizabeth A. Albright, Duke University, North Carolina
- Date Published: March 2024
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781009054379
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Disasters can serve as focusing events that increase agenda attention related to issues of disaster response, recovery, and preparedness. Increased agenda attention can lead to policy changes and organisational learning. The degree and type of learning that occurs within a government organization after a disaster may matter to policy outcomes related to individual, household, and community-level risks and resilience. Local governments are the first line of disaster response but also bear the burden of performing long-term disaster recovery and planning for future events. Crow and Albright present the first framework for understanding if, how, and to what effect communities and local governments learn after a disaster strikes. Drawing from analyses conducted over a five-year period following extreme flooding in Colorado, USA, Community Disaster Recovery: Moving from Vulnerability to Resilience presents a framework of community-level learning after disaster and the factors that catalyse policy change towards resilience.
Read more- Brings together empirical evidence across multiple communities to demonstrate that certain factors make resilience-building more likely
- Provides a framework that focuses attention on the factors that make learning and successful disaster recovery more likely at the community-level
- Of interest to scholars of disaster and environmental/resilience policy, as well as graduate students studying public policy, disaster and emergency management, and environmental management and resilience planning
Reviews & endorsements
'After a disaster, residents and local governments often struggle to figure out a way towards holistic recovery, policy change, and learning. Based on extensive qualitative and quantitative data and rooted in hope, Crow and Albright focus on the flood-hit Colorado areas of Denver, Larimer, and Weld, to analyze when communities actually learn lessons following a shock. A deeply researched, important guide for decision makers and students alike.' Daniel P. Aldrich, Professor, Northeastern University, and author of Building Resilience and Black Wave
See more reviews'Understanding community-level learning in the wake of disaster is essential to strengthen disaster resilience. In this authoritative book, Crow and Albright provides a rich and insightful framework for analyzing learning and dynamics of community resilience after major disaster events. This is an important reference for both scholars and practitioners with an interest in how communities use experience from disruptive disasters to build resilience for the future.' Daniel Nohrstedt, Professor in Political Science, Uppsala University
'… timely, rigorous, and applicable to multiple disciplines … Highly recommended.' E. J. Delaney, Choice
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×Product details
- Date Published: March 2024
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781009054379
- length: 298 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 16 mm
- weight: 0.43kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Section I. Introduction
1. Introduction to Disasters, Change, and Community-Level Resilience
2. Colorado's 2013 Floods: The Disaster that Primed Community-Level Learning
Section II. Damage and Resources
3. Disaster Damage, Severity, and Extent
4. Pre-Disaster Capacity and Post-Disaster Resources for Recovery
Section III. Individual Beliefs
5. Worldviews, Risk Perceptions, and Causal Beliefs: How Individuals Experience Disasters
6. Trust in Government and Support for Policy Action
Section IV. Individual & Group Engagement
7. Stakeholder Engagement and Community-Level Disaster Recovery towards Resilience
8. Intergovernmental Relationships and Successful Disaster Recovery and Learning
Section V. Connections, Conclusions and Recommendations
9. A Framework for Understanding Community-Level Learning in the Aftermath of Disaster
10. Examining Community-Scale Disaster Recovery and Resilience Beyond Colorado
11. Conclusions, Recommendations, and Future Directions.
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