Academic literature on the topic 'Community resilience'

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Journal articles on the topic "Community resilience"

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Kinanthi, Melok Roro, Novika Grasiaswaty, and Yulistin Tresnawaty. "Resiliensi pada mahasiswa di Jakarta: Menilik peran komunitas." Persona:Jurnal Psikologi Indonesia 9, no. 2 (December 25, 2020): 249–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.30996/persona.v9i2.3449.

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AbstractCollege students are prone to depression so that they need to be resilient. The aim of this study is to examine whether community resilience affects resiliency among college students in Jakarta. With a quantitative approach, this study involved 265 participants, selected by convenience sampling. We applied Community Advancing Resilience Toolkit Assessment Survey (CARTAS) and Connor Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) to gather data on the variables. Reliability coefficients for CARTAS were .656 to .806 for each dimension. While the reliability coefficient for CDRIS was .881. The regression analysis revealed community resilience has a significant positive contribution to individual resilience among participants. For each dimension, the contribution of community resilience to individual resilience was 7,9% to 12,2%. This result implied the community-based approach should be considered to develop an intervention for enhancing individual resilience.Keywords: College student; Community resilience; Resilience. AbstrakPenelitian terdahulu mengungkapkan bagaimana resiliensi memainkan peranan penting bagi mahasiswa agar dapat berdaya dengan maksimal. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui peran resiliensi komunitas terhadap resiliensi mahasiswa di Jakarta. Menggunakan pendekatan kuantitatif, penelitian ini melibatkan 265 partisipan yang dipilih melalui convenience sampling. Instrumen pengumpulan data yang digunakan adalah Community Advancing Resilience Toolkit Assessment Survey (CARTAS) and Connor Davidson Resilience Scale (CDRISC). Koefisien reliabilitas Cronbach Alpha CARTAS berkisar antara 0,656- 0,806 untuk tiap-tiap dimensinya. Sementara itu, koefisien reliabilitas Cronbach Alpha CDRISC adalah 0,881. Analisis regresi menunjukkan resiliensi komunitas berkontribusi positif secara signifikan terhadap resiliensi mahasiswa di Jakarta, dengan kontribusi sebesar 7,9% hingga 12,2%. Temuan ini mengindikasikan pendekatan berbasis masyarakat atau komunitas dapat dipertimbangkan dalam penyusunan intervensi yang dapat meningkatkan resiliensi individu.Kata kunci: Mahasiswa; Resiliensi komunitas; Resiliensi.
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Buchanan, Randy K., Simon R. Goerger, Christina H. Rinaudo, Greg Parnell, Adam Ross, and Valerie Sitterle. "Resilience in engineered resilient systems." Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation: Applications, Methodology, Technology 17, no. 4 (May 29, 2018): 435–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1548512918777901.

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Dynamically transforming mission contexts in conjunction with ever-increasing budgetary constraints provides great impetus for the Department of Defense (DoD) to identify resilient systems early in the design process. The engineered resilient systems (ERS) community of interest (COI) research efforts focus on identifying and quantifying methods to perform systems engineering analysis in a model-based physics-driven environment. Research conducted has approached resiliency from various perspectives, including inherent resilience, mission and platform resilience, and value-driven resilient tradespace. This article examines resilience in an ERS context and presents multiple perspectives of resilience for consideration when developing modeling and simulation platforms to support analysis of systems under acquisition consideration.
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Ruiz-Román, Cristóbal, Jesús Juárez Pérez-Cea, and Lorena Molina Cuesta. "Evolución y nuevas perspectivas del concepto de resiliencia: de lo individual a los contextos y relaciones socioeducativas." Educatio Siglo XXI 38, no. 2 Jul-Oct (June 25, 2020): 213–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/educatio.432981.

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La resiliencia es un concepto que en los últimos años está teniendo cada vez mayor presencia en los ámbitos sociales y educativos de nuestro país. Aunque su uso es relativamente reciente en el contexto español, sin embargo es un concepto que viene siendo utilizado desde el ámbito de la práctica profesional y avalado por numerosas investigaciones en el contexto anglosajón. Este trabajo tiene como objetivo estudiar la evolución que este concepto ha tenido durante las últimas décadas. Este análisis pone de manifiesto que la resiliencia es un tópico controvertido y en plena construcción. En efecto, los resultados del estudio bibliográfico y conceptual sobre la resiliencia muestran la evolución que ha tenido el tema en las tres últimas décadas desde un enfoque de la resiliencia centrado en el individuo y las cualidades de la persona resiliente, hacia un enfoque más socioeducativo, que se preocupa por comprender todos los elementos culturales y comunitarios que emergen e interactúan en los procesos resilientes. A partir de todo este análisis, el artículo arroja algunas conclusiones para repensar y actualizar el modo de abordar las prácticas e investigaciones sobre resiliencia. Resilience is a concept that in recent years has had an ever-increasing presence in social and educational settings in Spain. Although its use is relatively recent in the Spanish context, it has been used in professional practice and supported by extensive research in the English-speaking context. This paper aims to study the evolution of this concept over the last decades. Our analysis found that resilience is a controversial topic and is still being constructed. The outcomes of the literature review and the conceptual study on resilience showed that this issue has been evolving over the last three decades, moving from an individual-based approach to resilience, focused on the qualities of a resilient person, towards a more socio-educational focus, concerned with understanding all the cultural and community-based elements that emerge and interact in resilience processes. From this analysis, the paper delimits some conclusions aimed at rethinking and updating how resilience practices and research are addressed.
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Komino, Takeshi. "Community Resilience." Ecumenical Review 66, no. 3 (October 2014): 324–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/erev.12109.

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Rivera, Fernando I., Naim Kapucu, and Christopher Hawkins. "Rural Community Disaster Resiliency: Self-Organizing Collective Action among Farmworkers in Central Florida." International Journal of Mass Emergencies & Disasters 33, no. 2 (August 2015): 213–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/028072701503300204.

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In this article we examined how voluntary and self-organizing efforts contributed to disaster resiliency in a rural community in Central Florida. We analyzed data from a focus group with farmworkers in Central Florida to investigate how self-organizing collective action can help develop more resilient communities in socially vulnerable populations. We identified three major themes within our coding scheme: past disaster experiences, self-organizing collective action, and challenges to self-organizing collective action and resilience. The results indicated that past disaster experiences provided an opportunity for these farmworkers to mobilize their social capital and network partnerships to self-organize and develop disaster resilience. The findings indicated that self-organizing collective action could be effective in creating disaster resilience, even in socially vulnerable populations. Nonetheless, the results also indicated certain challenges to self-organizing collective action and resilience such as: language barriers, an anti-immigrant sentiment, poor relations with law enforcement, and lack of work. These challenges are constant reminders that the goal of creating truly disaster resilient communities cannot be reached if these conditions are not lessen or eradicated.
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YAZID, AHMAD SHUKRI. "Disaster Resilience: Community and Stakeholder Perspective." Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 51, no. 2 (April 20, 2020): 87–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.36872/lepi/v51i2/301081.

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Hidayati, Elok. "Dinamika Kelompok dalam Resiliensi Komunitas Nelayan Menghadapi Kerusakan Ekosistem Laut." Jurnal Sains Komunikasi dan Pengembangan Masyarakat [JSKPM] 4, no. 6 (December 24, 2020): 880. http://dx.doi.org/10.29244/jskpm.v4i6.748.

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ABSTRAKELOK HIDAYATI. Dinamika Kelompok dalam Resiliensi Komunitas Nelayan Menghadapi Kerusakan Ekosistem Laut. Di bawah bimbingan NURMALA K. PANDJAITAN.Rusaknya ekosistem laut akibat aktivitas manusia dan perubahan iklim membawa dampak pada rusaknya terumbu karang dan punahnya berbagai jenis ikan. Komunitas nelayan yang paling dirugikan dengan bencana ini karena terancamnya sumber mata pencarian mereka. Tujuan penelitian ini adalah menganalisis dinamika kelompok dan resiliensi komunitas nelayan dalam menghadapi ancaman kerusakan ekosistem laut. Metode yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah metode survei dengan teknik pengumpulan data secara accidental dengan jumlah responden sebanyak 30 orang. Data primer diperoleh melalui wawancara berstruktur dengan menggunakan kuesioner dan wawancara mendalam pada beberapa informan untuk mendapatkan data kualitatif sebagai penunjang data kuantitatif. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa komunitas nelayan mampu beradaptasi atau resilien baik pada komponen sosial (social resilience), ekonomi (economic resilience) maupun infrastruktur (infrastructure resilience) dalam menghadapi bencana kerusakan ekosistem laut. Hal ini ditopang oleh adanya kekuatan dalam dinamika kelompok terutama pada komunikasi kelompok dan kohesi kelompok sehingga dapat terbangun aksi kolektif untuk mengatasi berbagai permasalahan yang dihadapi.Kata kunci: aksi kolektif, dinamika kelompok, kepemimpinan dalam kelompok, resiliensi komunitas ABSTRACTELOK HIDAYATI. Group Dynamic in Fishing Community Resilience towards Marine Ecosystem Damage. Supervised by NURMALA K. PANDJAITAN.Marine ecosystem damage due to human activities and climate change has had an impact on the destruction of coral reefs and the extinction of various types of fish. The fishing community is the most affected by this disaster because their livelihood sources are threatened. The purpose of this study was to analyze group dynamic and the resilience of fishing communities in facing the threat of marine ecosystem damage. The method used in this research is a survey method with accidental data collection techniques with a total of 30 respondents. Primary data were obtained through structured interviews using questionnaires and in-depth interviews with several informants to obtain qualitative data to support quantitative data. The results showed that the fishing community was able to adapt or be resilient both to the social (social resilience), economy (economic resilience) and infrastructure (infrastructure resilience) components towards marine ecosystem damage. This is supported by the existence of strength in group dynamics, especially in group communication and group cohesion so that collective action can be built to overcome various problems faced.Keywords: collective action, community resilience, group dynamic, leadership in group
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Safira, Fajar Aniq, Chatarina Muryani, and Gentur Adi Tjahjono. "Analysis of the Level of Community Resilience to Tsunami Disasters in Petanahan Coastal District in 2020." Social, Humanities, and Educational Studies (SHES): Conference Series 5, no. 4 (December 25, 2022): 265. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/shes.v5i4.69070.

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<p><em>Tingginya tingkat kerawanan bencana mendorong perlunya membentuk masyarakat yang resilien. Resiliensi masyarakat memberikan kesiapsiagaan bagi masyarakat, menentukan bagaimana cara merespon, dan bagaimana melakukan recovery dalam menghadapi bencana tsunami. Berdasarkan hal tersebut penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui tingkat resiliensi masyarakat terhadap bencana tsunami di pesisir Kecamatan Petanahan, Kabupaten Kebumen tahun 2020. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode deskriptif kualitatif. Tingkat resiliensi masyarakat terhadap bencana tsunami di pesisir Kecamatan Petanahan tahun 2020 berada pada tingkat resiliensi tinggi (high resilience) dengan tiga indikator tertinggi adalah coastal resource management dengan nilai 99,75%, risk knowledge dengan nilai 83,74% dan warning &amp; evacuation dengan nilai 90,91 %. Selain itu, elemen resiliensi yang tergolong sedang (intermediate resilience) yaitu society &amp; economy dengan nilai 52,31%, land use &amp; structural design dengan nilai 55,38 %, dan disaster recovery dengan nilai 41,15%, dan elemen resiliensi rendah (low resilience) yaitu governance dengan nilai 33,85% dan emergency response dengan nilai 20%.</em><em></em></p>
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Jones, Bernard Anthony. "Can Community Resilience to Disaster Be Taught?" International Journal of Risk and Contingency Management 10, no. 4 (October 2021): 58–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrcm.2021100105.

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The field of resilience is multifaceted and diverse. The foundations of resilience research are embedded in psychology; however, in recent years, the concept has been adopted in many other areas. Moreover, resilience has become more prevalent in disaster response literature but is somewhat confusing in the different ways it is defined and applied. This paper attempts to clarify resilience and interest in developing dialogue about better ways to assist those who deal with tragedy and disaster. If we as a society want to survive, recover, and thrive in the aftermath of disaster and/or traumatic events, we need to start with assisting individuals and organizations in understanding resilience. We need to assist them in tapping into past experiences while enhancing their traits and characteristics for better future resilience. Hence, this paper seeks to address how community resiliency to disasters be taught.
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Dwirahmadi, Rutherford, Phung, and Chu. "Understanding the Operational Concept of a Flood-Resilient Urban Community in Jakarta, Indonesia, from the Perspectives of Disaster Risk Reduction, Climate Change Adaptation and Development Agencies." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 20 (October 18, 2019): 3993. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16203993.

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Climate change-related extreme events such as floods have and will continue to present a great challenge to disaster risk management. There is a pressing need to develop a robust management strategy via enhancing the resiliency of the community, particularly in the context of complex urban environments, like Jakarta. Resilience is conceptualized within specific contexts and uniquely tailored to the targeted setting, yet research regarding the operational concept of a flood-resilient community in the context of Jakarta remains limited. This paper will elaborate this operational concept through understanding the desirable features and influential barriers of a flood-resilient community through the lenses of three main stakeholder groups: disaster risk reduction (DRR), climate change adaptation (CCA), and development. It will also discuss the ways in which the synergies that exist across these groups can be enhanced. Both quantitative and qualitative approaches were applied in this study, and multiple sources of data were used. The findings indicate that these groups share common views regarding the importance of human aspects being central to resilience building efforts. We argue there is an urgent need to shift the flood resilience building paradigm towards building community resilience from the people and to apply a collaborative governance approach to facilitate effective partnership between the actors involved.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Community resilience"

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Newell, Sarah. "Building an Ontology of Community Resilience." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/31755.

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Background: Community resilience to a disaster is a complex phenomenon studied using a variety of research lenses, such as psychological and ecological, resulting in a lack of consensus about what the key factors are that make a community resilient. Formally representing this knowledge will allow researchers to better understand the links between the knowledge generated using different lenses and help to integrate new findings into the existing body of knowledge. Objective: Using ontology engineering methods to represent this knowledge will provide a tool to aid researchers in the field. Methods: An ontology is a structured way of organizing and representing knowledge in the field of community resilience to a disaster. The model created using this method can be read by a computer, which allows a reasoner to manipulate and infer new knowledge. Results: When using these methods to structure community resilience knowledge some of the complexities and ambiguities were identified. These included semantic ambiguities, such as two distinct factors being used interchangeably or two terms being used to describe the same factor, making the distinction between what are the factors and the characteristics of those factors, and finally, the inherited characteristics and relationships associated with hierarchical relationships. Conclusions: Having the knowledge about community resilience to a disaster represented in an ontology will aid researchers when operationalizing this knowledge in the future.
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Kennedy, Neil Patrick Martyn. "Employing Cornish cultures for community resilience." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/12641.

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Employing Cornish Cultures for Community Resilience. Can cultural distinctiveness be used to strengthen community bonds, boost morale and equip and motivate people socially and economically? Using the witness of people in Cornwall and comparative experiences, this discussion combines a review of how cultures are commodified and portrayed with reflections on well-being and ‘emotional prosperity’. Cornwall is a relatively poor European region with a cultural identity that inspires an established ethno-cultural movement and is the symbolic basis of community awareness and aspiration, as well as the subject of contested identities and representations. At the heart of this is an array of cultures that is identified as Cornish, including a distinct post-industrial inheritance, the Cornish Language and Celtic Revivalism. Cultural difference has long been a resource for cultural industries and tourism and discussion of using culture for regeneration has accordingly concentrated almost exclusively on these sectors but an emergent ‘regional distinctiveness agenda’ is beginning to present Cornish cultures as an asset for use in branding and marketing other sectors. All of these uses ultimately involve commodification but culture potentially has a far wider role to play in fostering economic, social, cultural and environmental resilience. This research therefore uses multidisciplinary approaches to broaden the discussion to include culture’s primary emotional and social uses. It explores the possibility that enhancing these uses could help to tackle economic and social disadvantage and to build more cohesive communities. The discussion centres on four linked themes: multiple forms of capital; discourse, narrative and myth; human need, emotion and well-being; representation and intervention. Cultural, social, symbolic and human capital are related to collective status and well-being through consideration of cultural practices, repertoires and knowledge. These are explored with discussion of accompanying representations and discourses and their social, emotional and economic implications so as to allow tentative suggestions for intervention in policy and representation. A key conclusion is that culture may be used proactively to increase ‘emotional capital’.
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Wilder, Shannon M. J. "Resilience from Violence in the Transgender Community." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1498051485277639.

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Wilder, Shannon Marie Johnson. "Resilience from Violence in the Transgender Community." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1530112472869158.

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Mary, Wells Margaret. "Resilience in rural community-dwelling older adults." Diss., Online access via UMI:, 2007.

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Droz, PennElys. "Biocultural Engineering Design for Indigenous Community Resilience." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/323449.

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Indigenous peoples worldwide are engaged in the process of rebuilding and re-empowering their communities. They are faced with challenges emerging from a history of physical, spiritual, emotional, and economic colonization, challenges including a degraded resource base, lack of infrastructure, and consistent pressure on their land tenure and ways of life. These communities, however, continue demonstrating profound resilience in the midst of these challenges; working to re-empower and provide for the contemporary needs of their people in a manner grounded in supporting bio-cultural integrity; the interconnected relationship of people and homeland. At the same time, in response to contemporary environmental degradation, the fields of resilience science, adaptive management, and ecological engineering have emerged, the recommendations of which bear remarkable similarity to Indigenous ontologies, epistemologies, and governance structures. The relationship between these fields and Indigenous epistemology, underscored by experience in the field, has led to the conceptualization of bio-cultural engineering design; design that emerges from the inter-relationship of people and ecology. The biocultural engineering design methodology identifies the unique cosmological relationships and cultural underpinnings of contemporary Indigenous communities, and applies this specific cultural lens to engineered design and architecture. The development of resilience principles within the fields of architecture and engineering have created avenues for biocultural design to be translatable into engineering and architectural design documents, allowing access to large scale financial support for community development. This method is explored herein through literature and analysis of practical application in several different Indigenous communities and nations. This method lends itself to future research on biocultural design processes as a source of technological and design innovation as Indigenous communities practice placing their values and cosmologies at the center of development decisions, as well as comprehensive start-to-finish documentation of the methodology applied to diverse engineered applications, including water systems, energy systems, and building construction.
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Strong, Grant Martin. "An exploration of community resilience in a group of postgraduate students in a challenging training programme / Grant Martin Strong." Thesis, North-West University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/4324.

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Muir, Laurelle. "Operationalising community disaster resilience: The role of place-based community organisations." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2020. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/198194/1/Laurelle_Muir_Thesis.pdf.

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This thesis examines how place-based community organisations can play an effective role in the operationalisation of community disaster resilience. This study has explored the roles delivered by two place-based community organisations during the Brisbane 2011 flood, providing important new knowledge on how their roles were delivered, identifying the influence of the characteristics of community disaster resilience and key elements of social capital, as well as examining learnings from international models of community led responses. The framework developed through this research provides a practical and viable mechanism to activate the vision of disaster resilience outlined in policy frameworks in Australia. This framework has suggested a departure from a traditional "top down" approach to disaster resilience, presenting a crucial opportunity to strengthen the capacity of the disaster management system to respond to an increasing frequency of disaster events.
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Thomas, Huw. "Social resilience in Cornish fishing communities." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/9690.

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Rural Cornish coastal fishing communities express, and have expressed, varying degrees of ability to develop and retain social resilience capacity, or the ability to withstand ‘shock’ over both ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ onset events in social, political, economic and natural domain terms (Wilson, 2012a). Endogenous and exogenous influences may include natural changes in resources and resource dependency resulting in the loss or depletion of community livelihoods associated with a decline in fishing activities (Brookfield, 2005; Marshall, 2007a), issues of tourism driven change and notions of ‘community’. Four capitals are initially conceptually considered, those of natural, political, social and economic capitals driving institutional change and individual-community behaviour within fishing communities. This is considered for fishing activities and cross-community aspirational or extant forms of resilience building with a particular focus on social memory, community-personal identity (Wilson, 2012b; Wilson, 2013; Wilson, 2014) and critically, power (Chaskin, 2001). This research frames community resilience within a resilience framework on local, national and EU scales. The initial capital approach is further developed and articulated into a novel resilience status and process framework, the community resilience and vulnerability index, or the CRVI. The research fieldwork observes social resilience through empirical qualitative methods supported by an anthropological lens, especially in regard to social issues, trust, confidence, power and agency within fishing communities and trajectories that have been guided by internal and external influences and adaptive change to social networks. One of the research challenges was the building of the CRVI using coupled approaches to coping strategies that may have value both across the Cornish case study communities and into wider community usage.
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Farrell, John L. "Community Engagement for Collective Resilience : The Rising System." Thesis, Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10945/17363.

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Since the inception of the United States Department of Homeland Security, the American public has been told that it has a prominent role to play in the War on Terror. However, this role has not been clearly defined. This thesis explores the viability of community engagement as a tool to promote public safety and homeland security. Research was primarily conducted through a literature review (to understand how engagement impacts safety), and a comparison of four case studies of safety-centric engagement programs in the U.S. and United Kingdom. While several of the programs in the case studies have proven to be effective at developing trust and improving security, the U.S. federal government has not effectively worked with these resources to improve its understanding of the domestic security landscape. This thesis contends that a new system is necessary to connect the federal government to local engagement programs. This may be accomplished with a domestic coordination and engagement system, referred to as the Rising System for the purposes of this thesis. The goal of the Rising System would be threefold To link federal, state, and local governments; to build on existing community policing and outreach efforts to help at-risk communities identify their greatest challenges; and to provide a forum where community members can safely work with their government to develop solutions.
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Books on the topic "Community resilience"

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Masterson, Jaimie Hicks, Walter Gillis Peacock, Shannon S. Van Zandt, Himanshu Grover, Lori Feild Schwarz, and John T. Cooper. Planning for Community Resilience. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-586-1.

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Lerch, Daniel, ed. The Community Resilience Reader. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-861-9.

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Deeming, Hugh, Maureen Fordham, Christian Kuhlicke, Lydia Pedoth, Stefan Schneiderbauer, and Cheney Shreve, eds. Framing Community Disaster Resilience. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119166047.

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Haque, A. K. Enamul, Pranab Mukhopadhyay, Mani Nepal, and Md Rumi Shammin, eds. Climate Change and Community Resilience. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0680-9.

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Patel, Sonny S. Community Resilience When Disaster Strikes. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-07992-4.

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Jakubowicz, Andrew, Kevin Dunn, Gail Mason, Yin Paradies, Ana-Maria Bliuc, Nasya Bahfen, Andre Oboler, Rosalie Atie, and Karen Connelly. Cyber Racism and Community Resilience. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64388-5.

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Ride, Anouk, and Diane Bretherton, eds. Community Resilience in Natural Disasters. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230339323.

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Stout, Mike, and Amanda W. Harrist, eds. Building Community and Family Resilience. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49799-6.

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Ronan, Kevin R., and David M. Johnston. Promoting Community Resilience in Disasters. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b102725.

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Di, Bretherton, ed. Community resilience in natural disasters. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Community resilience"

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Wright, Katy. "Resilience." In Community Resilience, 13–28. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-2.

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Acevedo, Shannon. "Community Resilience." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research, 1091–94. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0753-5_479.

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Cattell, Vicky. "Community Resilience." In Poverty, Community and Health, 53–71. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230355101_4.

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McLean, Andrew J. "Community Resilience." In Islamophobia and Psychiatry, 361–73. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00512-2_30.

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Wright, Katy. "Community resilience in the COVID-19 pandemic." In Community Resilience, 114–36. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-8.

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Wright, Katy. "Introduction." In Community Resilience, 1–12. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-1.

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Wright, Katy. "Risk." In Community Resilience, 29–44. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-3.

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Wright, Katy. "Response and recovery." In Community Resilience, 79–96. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-6.

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Wright, Katy. "Preparation and planning." In Community Resilience, 62–78. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-5.

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Wright, Katy. "Community, cohesion and organisations." In Community Resilience, 45–61. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429448188-4.

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Conference papers on the topic "Community resilience"

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"Resilient Community and Infrastructure." In 2019 Resilience Week (RWS). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/rws47064.2019.8971811.

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Fifield, Shivali. "Glasgow, environmental justice and community resilience." In IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ifou2018-06014.

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Collins, M., J. Carlson, and F. Petit. "Community resilience: measuring a community’s ability to withstand." In DISASTER MANAGEMENT 2011. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/dman110111.

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Sutriningsih, Ani, Chatarina Umbul Wahyuni, and Setya Haksama. "Community Health Center Resilience in Disaster Management: A Narrative Review." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.12.

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ABSTRACT Background: Indonesia’s disaster management context uses a system called Pentahelix, which is defined as a more optimal framework for activities and jobs. The community health center is the front line that plays a significant role in the preparedness and management of disaster victims. The aim of this study is to review the resilience of disaster management in community health center. Subjects and Methods: This was a narrative review. Sources of data in this study come from articles obtained through PubMed, Science Direct, and Scopus databases. The keywords used were “disaster” OR “emergency” AND “resilience” AND “hospital” OR “healthcare” OR “health care”. The inclusion criteria consisted of: (1) articles published in English; (2) research or review articles; (3) publication from 2014-2019. Results: Based on the available articles, it was found that the resilience of public health centers was generally identified in 5 aspects, namely physical toughness, social resilience, institutional toughness, infrastructure resilience, and vulnerability. Conclusion: Community health center resilience is needed to ensure that community health center will be resilient, safe and will continue to operate in the event of an emergency or disaster. Keywords: resilience, community health center, disaster Correspondence: Ani Sutriningsih. Faculty of Health Sciences, Universitas Tribhuwana Tunggadewi Malang/ Doctoral Program, Faculty of Public Health, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya. Email: ani.sutriningsih-2018@unair.ac.id DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.12
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Schneider, Jennifer, Carol Romanowski, Sumita Mishra, Rajendra K. Raj, Michael McGuiness, and Brandon Swartz. "Building forward: Strategic community resilience." In 2017 IEEE International Symposium on Technologies for Homeland Security (HST). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ths.2017.7943501.

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Lin, Szu-Yun, Lichao Xu, Wei-Chu Chuang, Sherif El-Tawil, Seymour M. J. Spence, Vineet R. Kamat, Carol C. Menassa, and Jason McCormick. "Modeling Interactions in Community Resilience." In Structures Conference 2018. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784481349.001.

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Khandkar, Shantanu, and Janhavi Khandkar. "Community Participation in Slum Rehabilitation in Mumbai, India." In IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ifou2018-05936.

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Feofilovs, Maksims, Francesco Romagnoli, and Rasa Vaiškūnaitė. "INFRASTRUCTURE AND COMMUNITY RESILIENCE METRICS: APPLICATION OF THE HOLISTIC METHOD WITHIN THE LATVIAN CONTEXT." In Conference for Junior Researchers „Science – Future of Lithuania“. VGTU Technika, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/aainz.2016.06.

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Enhancing and building resilient cities represent a contemporary approach on which scientists and policy makers are strengthening cooperation; however, so far quantitative metrics and standards for measuring resilience are still open issues. This must be aimed toward diminishing society’s vulnerability and reducing the likelihood of disasters (both manmade and natural) and their possible effects. The evaluation of metrics within the crisis management should be able to provide a useful tool and enable stakeholders to assess the effectiveness of resilience strategies and their added value is a key factor for building resilient sound communities and infrastructures. Several frameworks and models have been created and proposed to assess and evaluate the resilience of critical infrastructures (CIs) as well as the evaluation of community resilience. Nevertheless, their application is limited to specific case studies, thus showing lack of a robust link with the decision making dimensions. This study examines infrastructure and community resilience to natural hazards in six regions of Latvia: Riga, around Riga region, Kurzeme, Vidzeme, Latgale and Zemgale. The aim of this study is to create a Community disaster resilience index (CDRI) with the application of a holistic indicatorbased model. Based on the literature-based research an initial total list of 86 indicators has been selected for a model representing social, economic, physical, human and environment capital (or resources to be potentially mobilized) and linked by their relevance to the main phases of the disaster resilience dynamics: mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery.
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Ridzuan, Ahmad Azan, Mohd Juraimy Hj Kadir, Safar Yaacob, Rina Suryani Oktari, Noor Azmi Mohd Zainol, and Mazura Mat Zain. "Community resilience elements and community preparedness at Bukit Antarabangsa." In INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON EARTH HAZARD AND DISASTER MITIGATION (ISEDM) 2016: The 6th Annual Symposium on Earthquake and Related Geohazard Research for Disaster Risk Reduction. Author(s), 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4987122.

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Trovato, Maria, and Katherine Dunster. "Landscape, community and resilience: migration and inclusive cities." In IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ifou2018-05999.

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Reports on the topic "Community resilience"

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Bouikidis, A. Social infrastructure and community resilience. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330535.

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Ian Manlutac, Janice, Helen Jeans, and Steve Jennings. Community Stories of Resilience Building in ASEAN: Strengthening community resilience through peer-to-peer learning. Oxfam, December 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2017.1305.

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Mizzen, David R., Peter J. Vickery, Francis M. Lavelle, and Kent Yu. Community Resilience Workshop : July 30, 2014. National Institute of Standards and Technology, September 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.14-979.

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Gupta, Nayanee, Zoe E. Petropoulos, Austin B. Mudd, Rashida Nek, and Sally S. Tinkle. Case Studies of Community Resilience Policy. National Institute of Standards and Technology, May 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.16-002.

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Mizzen, David R. Community Resilience Workshop: Release of Draft Community Resilience Planning Guide for Public Comment April 27, 2015. National Institute of Standards and Technology, August 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.15-994.

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Olszewski, Thomas, Irina Liu, and Allison Cunningham. Survey of Federal Community Resilience Programs and Available Resilience Planning Tools. National Institute of Standards and Technology, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.21-027.

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Ayyub, Bilal M., Robert E. Chapman, Gerald E. Galloway, and Richard N. Wright. Economics of Community Disaster Resilience Workshop Proceedings. National Institute of Standards and Technology, February 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.sp.1600.

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Mizzen, David R., Peter J. Vickery, and Kent Yu. Community Resilience Workshop October 27-28, 2014. National Institute of Standards and Technology, February 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.15-981.

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Mizzen, David R. Community Resilience Workshop February 18-19, 2015. National Institute of Standards and Technology, August 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.gcr.15-993.

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Laurien, Finn, and Adriana Keating. Evidence from Measuring Community Flood Resilience in Asia. Asian Development Bank, October 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/wps190484-2.

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