Publication | Closed Access
Social Dimensions of Disaster Recovery
221
Citations
41
References
2012
Year
EngineeringDisaster CoverageSocial SciencesRecovery ProcessesDisaster RecoveryPublic PolicyLinear ConceptualizationsDisaster Risk ManagementDisaster VulnerabilityDisaster ResilienceSocial ImpactDisaster ResponseCommunity DevelopmentDisaster ManagementSociologyDisaster ResearchCrisis ManagementDisaster Risk ReductionEmergency Medicine
Research on disaster recovery has moved beyond earlier uni-dimensional, stage-oriented, and linear conceptualizations and toward approaches that recognize variability, social inequality and diversity, and disparities in recovery processes and outcomes. Theory development has been hampered by the lack of a systematic comparative focus and a failure to contextualize recovery within broader global and societal conditions and trends. Recovery theories should take into account a range of factors that include (1) pre-disaster factors that shape vulnerabilities and exposures at multiple scales, such as indicators of social and economic well-being and governmental capacity; (2) disaster impacts and their implications for recovery; (3) immediate post-impact responses; and (4) post-disaster variables such as the quality of governance systems; institutional capacity; civil society-state relationships; systems of social provision; the appropriateness, coverage, and equity of recovery aid; and post-disaster conditions, trends and events that occur independently of disasters but that also shape recovery processes and outcomes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1