Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Flood resilience measurement for communities: data for science and practice
View through CrossRef
<p>Given the increased attention put on strengthening disaster resilience, there is a growing need to invest in its measurement and the overall accountability of resilience strengthening initiatives. There is a major gap in evidence about what actually makes communities more resilient when an event occurs, because there are no empirically validated measures of disaster resilience. Similarly, an effort to identify operational indicators has gained some traction only more recently. The Flood Resilience Measurement for Communities (FRMC) framework and associated, fully operational, integrated tool takes a systems-thinking, holistic approach to serve the dual goals of generating data on the determinants of community flood resilience, and providing decision-support for on-the-ground investment. The FRMC framework measures &#8220;sources of resilience&#8221; before a flood happens and looks at the post-flood impacts afterwards. It is built around the notion of five types of capital (the 5Cs: human, social, physical, natural, and financial) and the 4Rs of a resilient system (robustness, redundancy, resourcefulness, and rapidity). The sources of resilience are graded based on Zurich&#8217;s Risk Engineering Technical Grading Standard. Results are displayed according to the 5Cs and 4Rs, the disaster risk management (DRM) cycle, themes and context level, to give the approach further flexibility and accessibility.</p><p>The Zurich Flood Resilience Alliance (ZFRA) has identified the measurement of resilience as a valuable ingredient in building community flood resilience. In the first application phase (2013-2018), we measured flood resilience in 118 communities across nine countries, building on responses at household and community levels. Continuing this endeavor in the second phase (2018 &#8211; 2023) will allow us to enrich the understanding of community flood resilience and to extend this unique data set.</p><p>We find that at the community level, the FRMC enables users to track community progress on resilience over time in a standardized way. It thus provides vital information for the decision-making process in terms of prioritizing the resilience-building measures most needed by the community. At community and higher decision-making levels, measuring resilience also provides a basis for improving the design of innovative investment programs to strengthen disaster resilience.</p><p>By exploring data across multiple communities (facing different flood types and with very different socioeconomic and political contexts), we can generate evidence with respect to which characteristics contribute most to community disaster resilience before an event strikes. This contributes to meeting the challenge of demonstrating that the work we do has the desired impact &#8211; that it actually builds resilience. Our findings suggest that stronger interactions between community functions induce co-benefits for community development.</p>
Title: Flood resilience measurement for communities: data for science and practice
Description:
<p>Given the increased attention put on strengthening disaster resilience, there is a growing need to invest in its measurement and the overall accountability of resilience strengthening initiatives.
There is a major gap in evidence about what actually makes communities more resilient when an event occurs, because there are no empirically validated measures of disaster resilience.
Similarly, an effort to identify operational indicators has gained some traction only more recently.
The Flood Resilience Measurement for Communities (FRMC) framework and associated, fully operational, integrated tool takes a systems-thinking, holistic approach to serve the dual goals of generating data on the determinants of community flood resilience, and providing decision-support for on-the-ground investment.
The FRMC framework measures &#8220;sources of resilience&#8221; before a flood happens and looks at the post-flood impacts afterwards.
It is built around the notion of five types of capital (the 5Cs: human, social, physical, natural, and financial) and the 4Rs of a resilient system (robustness, redundancy, resourcefulness, and rapidity).
The sources of resilience are graded based on Zurich&#8217;s Risk Engineering Technical Grading Standard.
Results are displayed according to the 5Cs and 4Rs, the disaster risk management (DRM) cycle, themes and context level, to give the approach further flexibility and accessibility.
</p><p>The Zurich Flood Resilience Alliance (ZFRA) has identified the measurement of resilience as a valuable ingredient in building community flood resilience.
In the first application phase (2013-2018), we measured flood resilience in 118 communities across nine countries, building on responses at household and community levels.
Continuing this endeavor in the second phase (2018 &#8211; 2023) will allow us to enrich the understanding of community flood resilience and to extend this unique data set.
</p><p>We find that at the community level, the FRMC enables users to track community progress on resilience over time in a standardized way.
It thus provides vital information for the decision-making process in terms of prioritizing the resilience-building measures most needed by the community.
At community and higher decision-making levels, measuring resilience also provides a basis for improving the design of innovative investment programs to strengthen disaster resilience.
</p><p>By exploring data across multiple communities (facing different flood types and with very different socioeconomic and political contexts), we can generate evidence with respect to which characteristics contribute most to community disaster resilience before an event strikes.
This contributes to meeting the challenge of demonstrating that the work we do has the desired impact &#8211; that it actually builds resilience.
Our findings suggest that stronger interactions between community functions induce co-benefits for community development.
</p>.
Related Results
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Introduction This essay begins with the premise that resilience, broadly defined as positive adaptation despite adversity (Garmezy and Rutter), and resilience building are importa...
Burden of the Beast
Burden of the Beast
Introduction
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and its fluctuating waves of infections and the emergence of new variants, Indigenous populations in Australia and worldwide have re...
ASP Flood After a Polymer Flood vs. ASP Flood After a Water Flood
ASP Flood After a Polymer Flood vs. ASP Flood After a Water Flood
Abstract
Alkaline-surfactant-polymer (ASP) flooding is an effective technique to improve oil recovery. It has been applied typically after a water flood. Recently, t...
correlation of human capital sustainability leadership style and resilience of the managers in airline operations group of an AIRLINE Company
correlation of human capital sustainability leadership style and resilience of the managers in airline operations group of an AIRLINE Company
This study aimed to analyze the correlation between Human Capital Sustainability Leadership style and manager resilience through a pragmatic worldview. Using explanatory sequential...
Probabilistic Flood Hazard Maps at Ungauged Locations Using Multivariate Extreme Values Approach
Probabilistic Flood Hazard Maps at Ungauged Locations Using Multivariate Extreme Values Approach
<p>Flood hazard maps are essential for development and assessment of flood risk management strategies. Conventionally, flood hazard assessment is based on determinist...
Adaptive Planning for Resilient Coastal Waterfronts
Adaptive Planning for Resilient Coastal Waterfronts
Many delta and coastal cities worldwide face increasing flood risk due to changing climate conditions and sea level rise. The question is how to develop measures and strategies for...
Assessment of Flood Risk Analysis in Selangor
Assessment of Flood Risk Analysis in Selangor
Flood events occur every year especially during the monsoon season. Although its consequences are not as disastrous as other natural disasters such as earthquakes and tornado storm...
Flood risk management in urban settlements in the eThekwini area
Flood risk management in urban settlements in the eThekwini area
Floods have accounted for two-thirds of all natural hazards affecting millions of people
and resulting in damage amounting to billions of US dollars. Over the years, flood disaster...

