S
Sonya Glavac
Researcher at University of New England (Australia)
Publications - 9
Citations - 246
Sonya Glavac is an academic researcher from University of New England (Australia). The author has contributed to research in topics: Natural disaster & Conceptual framework. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 168 citations. Previous affiliations of Sonya Glavac include Cooperative Research Centre.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Top-down assessment of disaster resilience: A conceptual framework using coping and adaptive capacities
Melissa Parsons,Melissa Parsons,Sonya Glavac,Sonya Glavac,Peter Hastings,Peter Hastings,Graham R. Marshall,Graham R. Marshall,James McGregor,James McGregor,Judith McNeill,Judith McNeill,Phil Morley,Phil Morley,Ian Reeve,Ian Reeve,Richard Stayner,Richard Stayner +17 more
TL;DR: The Australian Natural Disaster Resilience Index (ANDRI) as discussed by the authors takes a top-down approach using indicators derived from secondary data with national coverage and is a hierarchical design based on coping and adaptive capacities representing the potential for disaster resilience.
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Environmental Hazards as Disamenities: Selective Migration and Income Change in the United States from 2000–2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the complex relationship between migration and environmental hazards, broadly defined as "vulnerability lens", is explored, and a vulnerability lens is used to view environmental hazards through a migration vulnerability lens.
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Disaster resilience in Australia: A geographic assessment using an index of coping and adaptive capacity
Melissa Parsons,Melissa Parsons,Ian Reeve,Ian Reeve,James McGregor,James McGregor,Peter Hastings,Peter Hastings,Graham R. Marshall,Graham R. Marshall,Judith McNeill,Judith McNeill,Richard Stayner,Richard Stayner,Sonya Glavac,Sonya Glavac +15 more
TL;DR: The Australian disaster resilience index as discussed by the authors assesses resilience at three levels: overall capacity for disaster resilience; coping and adaptive capacity; and, eight themes of disaster resilience across social, economic and institutional domains.
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Local Government Capacity and Land Use Planning for Natural Hazards: A Comparative Evaluation of Australian Local Government Areas
TL;DR: In this paper, the practice of planning for natural hazards is devolved to local levels, making the planning of land use planning as a key mechanism for disaster risk reduction (DRR).