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      Redundancy as a strategy in disaster response systems: A pathway to resilience or a recipe for disaster?

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          Resilience, Adaptability and Transformability in Social-ecological Systems

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            Organizing and the Process of Sensemaking

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              Community resilience as a metaphor, theory, set of capacities, and strategy for disaster readiness.

              Communities have the potential to function effectively and adapt successfully in the aftermath of disasters. Drawing upon literatures in several disciplines, we present a theory of resilience that encompasses contemporary understandings of stress, adaptation, wellness, and resource dynamics. Community resilience is a process linking a network of adaptive capacities (resources with dynamic attributes) to adaptation after a disturbance or adversity. Community adaptation is manifest in population wellness, defined as high and non-disparate levels of mental and behavioral health, functioning, and quality of life. Community resilience emerges from four primary sets of adaptive capacities--Economic Development, Social Capital, Information and Communication, and Community Competence--that together provide a strategy for disaster readiness. To build collective resilience, communities must reduce risk and resource inequities, engage local people in mitigation, create organizational linkages, boost and protect social supports, and plan for not having a plan, which requires flexibility, decision-making skills, and trusted sources of information that function in the face of unknowns.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management
                J Contingencies and Crisis Management
                Wiley
                0966-0879
                1468-5973
                September 2017
                August 09 2017
                September 2017
                : 25
                : 3
                : 123-135
                Affiliations
                [1 ]North Carolina State University Raleigh NC USA
                [2 ]Georgia Southern University Statesboro GA USA
                [3 ]Independent Researcher
                Article
                10.1111/1468-5973.12178
                8b883c3d-d9e6-4e4a-9806-71f46bc93bc9
                © 2017

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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