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Journal ArticleDOI

Resilience for disaster risk management in a changing climate: Practitioners’ frames and practices

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TLDR
In this paper, a case study of the roll out of the Natural Disaster Resilience Program in Queensland, Australia, and the study involved three sites in Queensland was used to investigate how resilience ideas are conceptualized by practitioners as they implement them in practice.
Abstract
There is a growing use of resilience ideas within the disaster risk management literature and policy domain. However, few empirical studies have focused on how resilience ideas are conceptualized by practitioners, as they implement them in practice. Using Hajer's ‘social-interactive discourse theory’ this research contributes to the understanding of how practitioners frame, construct and make sense of resilience ideas in the context of changes in institutional arrangements for disaster risk management that explicitly include the resilience approach and climate change considerations. The case study involved the roll out of the Natural Disaster Resilience Program in Queensland, Australia, and the study involved three sites in Queensland. The methods used were observation of different activities and the physical sites, revision of documents related to the Natural Disaster Resilience Program and in-depth semi-structured interviews with key informants, all practitioners who had direct interaction with the program. The research findings show that practitioners construct the meaning of disaster resilience differently, and these are embedded in diverse storylines. Within these storylines, practitioners gave different interpretations and emphasis to the seven discourse categories that characterized their resilience discourse. Self-reliance emerged as one of the paramount discourse categories but we argue that caution needs to be used when promoting values of self-reliance. If the policy impetus is a focus on learning, research findings indicate it is also pertinent to move from experiential learning toward social learning. The results presented in this study provide helpful insights to inform policy design and implementation of resilience ideas in disaster risk management and climate change, and to inform theory.

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State-of-the-art review on power grid resilience to extreme weather events: Definitions, frameworks, quantitative assessment methodologies, and enhancement strategies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a state-of-the-art review of existing research on the study of grid resilience, which focuses on the point of view of power system engineering with respect to extreme weather events.
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Top-down assessment of disaster resilience: A conceptual framework using coping and adaptive capacities

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‘Subjective resilience’: using perceptions to quantify household resilience to climate extremes and disasters

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A critical review of social resilience assessment frameworks in disaster management

TL;DR: In this article, a review of existing frameworks and methods to understand their application in a disaster context, to highlight key challenges and future directions for developing robust social resilience assessment frameworks is presented.
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An inclusive and adaptive framework for measuring social resilience to disasters

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an inclusive and adaptive "5S" social resilience framework that was developed based on the critical review of existing social resilience frameworks discussed in the literature.
References
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Book

Social Research Methods

Alan Bryman
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the literature on qualitative and quantitative research in social research and discussed the nature and process of social research, the nature of qualitative research, and the role of focus groups in qualitative research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems

TL;DR: The traditional view of natural systems, therefore, might well be less a meaningful reality than a perceptual convenience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive governance of social-ecological systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the social dimension that enables adaptive ecosystem-based management, focusing on experiences of adaptive governance of social-ecological systems during periods of abrupt change and investigates social sources of renewal and reorganization.
Book

The politics of environmental discourse

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the emergence and increasing political importance of "ecological modernization" as a new concept in the language of environmental politics, which has come to replace the antagonistic debates of the 1970s, stresses the opportunities of environmental policy for modernizing the economy and stimulating the technological innovation.
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