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Social Vulnerability to Environmental Hazards

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The article was published on 2010-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1006 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Social vulnerability & Vulnerability.

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Citations
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A New Data-Driven Approach to Measuring Hurricane Risk.

TL;DR: A new data-driven approach for measuring the risk associated with a natural hazard, independent of its impacts on human society, and concentrates on hurricanes as a specific type of natural hazard is proposed.
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Drought and Farm Output: An Analysis of Common-Pool Water and the Role of Ethnic Fractionalization in Rural Pakistan

TL;DR: In this article, a household's ability to cope with the shock will be affected by its use of canal water and any adverse effects will be exacerbated if the farm is located in an ethnically fractionalized community.

Coastal Communities under Threat: Comparing Property and Social Exposure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the threat to coastal communities from sea level rise and extreme flooding and draw a distinction between the exposure of the physical property base of a community and its social composition, and investigate whether any correspondence exists between these two dimensions of vulnerability and whether it holds for both small and large communities.
References
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A place-based model for understanding community resilience to natural disasters

TL;DR: In this article, the disaster resilience of place (DROP) model is proposed to improve comparative assessments of disaster resilience at the local or community level, and a candidate set of variables for implementing the model are also presented as a first step towards its implementation.
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Disaster Resilience Indicators for Benchmarking Baseline Conditions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a methodology and a set of indicators for measuring baseline characteristics of communities that foster resilience by establishing baseline conditions, it becomes possible to monitor changes in resilience over time in particular places and to compare one place to another.
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A Social Vulnerability Index for Disaster Management

TL;DR: In this article, the development of a social vulnerability index (SVI) from 15 census variables at the census tract level for use in emergency management is described, and the potential value of the SVI by exploring the impact of Hurricane Katrina on local populations.
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Mapping community determinants of heat vulnerability.

TL;DR: The evidence that heat waves can result in both increased deaths and illness is substantial, and concern over this issue is rising because of climate change as discussed by the authors, and adverse health impacts from h...
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A flood vulnerability index for coastal cities and its use in assessing climate change impacts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a Coastal City Flood Vulnerability Index (CCFVI) based on exposure, susceptibility and resilience to coastal flooding, which is applied to nine cities around the world, each with different kinds of exposure.
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