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Wikipedia

Social vulnerability

In its broadest sense, social vulnerability is one dimension of vulnerability to multiple stressors and shocks, including abuse, social exclusion and natural hazards. Social vulnerability refers to the inability of people, organizations, and societies to withstand adverse impacts from multiple stressors to which they are exposed. These impacts are due in part to characteristics inherent in social interactions, institutions, and systems of cultural values.

Because it is most apparent when calamity occurs, many studies of social vulnerability are found in risk management literature.[1][2][3][4]

Definitions

"Vulnerability" derives from the Latin word vulnerare (to wound) and describes the potential to be harmed physically and/or psychologically. Vulnerability is often understood as the counterpart of resilience, and is increasingly studied in linked social-ecological systems. The Yogyakarta Principles, one of the international human rights instruments use the term "vulnerability" as such potential to abuse or social exclusion.[5]

The concept of social vulnerability emerged most recently within the discourse on natural hazards and disasters. To date no one definition has been agreed upon. Similarly, multiple theories of social vulnerability exist.[6] Most work conducted so far focuses on empirical observation and conceptual models. Thus, current social vulnerability research is a middle range theory and represents an attempt to understand the social conditions that transform a natural hazard (e.g. flood, earthquake, mass movements etc.) into a social disaster. The concept emphasizes two central themes:

  1. Both the causes and the phenomenon of disasters are defined by social processes and structures. Thus, it is not only a geo- or biophysical hazard, but rather the social context that needs to be considered to understand “natural” disasters.[7]
  2. Although different groups of a society may share a similar exposure to a natural hazard, the hazard has varying consequences for these groups, since they have diverging capacities and abilities to handle the impact of a hazard.

Taking a structuralist view, Hewitt [8] defines vulnerability as being:

...essentially about the human ecology of endangerment...and is embedded in the social geography of settlements and lands uses, and the space of distribution of influence in communities and political organisation.

This contrasts with the more socially focused view of Blaikie et al.[9] who define vulnerability as the:

...set of characteristics of a group or individual in terms of their capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist and recover from the impact of a natural hazard. It involves a combination of factors that determine the degree to which someone's life and livelihood is at risk by a discrete and identifiable event in nature or society.

History of the concept

In the 1970s the concept of vulnerability was introduced within the discourse on natural hazards and disaster by O´Keefe, Westgate, and Wisner.[10] In “taking the naturalness out of natural disasters” these authors insisted that socio-economic conditions are the causes for natural disasters. The work illustrated by means of empirical data that the occurrence of disasters increased over the last 50 years, paralleled by an increasing loss of life. The work also showed that the greatest losses of life concentrate in underdeveloped countries, where the authors concluded that vulnerability is increasing.

Chambers put these empirical findings on a conceptual level and argued that vulnerability has an external and internal side: People are exposed to specific natural and social risk. At the same time people possess different capacities to deal with their exposure by means of various strategies of action (Chambers 1989). This argument was again refined by Blaikie, Cannon, Davis, and Wisner, who went on to develop the Pressure and Release Model (PAR) (see below). Watts and Bohle argued similarly by formalizing the “social space of vulnerability”, which is constituted by exposure, capacity and potentiality (Watts and Bohle 1993).

Susan Cutter developed an integrative approach (hazard of place), which tries to consider both multiple geo- and biophysical hazards on the one hand as well as social vulnerabilities on the other hand.[11] Recently, Oliver-Smith grasped the nature-culture dichotomy by focusing both on the cultural construction of the people-environment-relationship and on the material production of conditions that define the social vulnerability of people (Oliver-Smith and Hoffman 2002).

Research on social vulnerability to date has stemmed from a variety of fields in the natural and social sciences. Each field has defined the concept differently, manifest in a host of definitions and approaches (Blaikie, Cannon et al. 1994; Henninger 1998; Frankenberger, Drinkwater et al. 2000; Alwang, Siegel et al. 2001; Oliver-Smith 2003; Cannon, Twigg et al. 2005). Yet some common threads run through most of the available work.

Within society

Although considerable research attention has examined components of biophysical vulnerability and the vulnerability of the built environment (Mileti, 1999), we currently know the least about the social aspects of vulnerability (Cutter et al., 2003). Socially created vulnerabilities are largely ignored, mainly due to the difficulty in quantifying them.

Social vulnerability is created through the interaction of social forces and multiple stressors, and it is resolved through social (as opposed to individual) means. While individuals within a socially vulnerable context may break through the "vicious cycle", social vulnerability itself can persist because of structural (i.e., social and political) influences that reinforce vulnerability. Social vulnerability is partially the product of social inequalities—those social factors that influence or shape the susceptibility of various groups to harm and that also govern their ability to respond (Cutter et al., 2003). It is, however, important to note that social vulnerability is not registered by exposure to hazards alone but also resides in the sensitivity and resilience of the system to prepare, cope, and recover from such hazards (Turner et al., 2003). However, it is also important to note, that a focus limited to the stresses associated with a particular vulnerability analysis is also insufficient for understanding the impact on and responses of the affected system or its components (Mileti, 1999; Kaperson et al., 2003; White & Haas, 1974). These issues are often underlined in attempts to model the concept (see Models of Social Vulnerability).

Models

 
Risk-Hazard (RH) model (diagram after Turner et al., 2003), showing the impact of a hazard as a function of exposure and sensitivity. The chain sequence begins with the hazard, and the concept of vulnerability is noted implicitly as represented by white arrows.

Two of the principal archetypal reduced-form models of social vulnerability are presented, which have informed vulnerability analysis: the Risk-Hazard (RH) model and the Pressure and Release model.

Risk-Hazard (RH) Model

Initial RH models sought to understand the impact of a hazard as a function of exposure to the hazardous event and the sensitivity of the entity exposed (Turner et al., 2003). Applications of this model in environmental and climate impact assessments generally emphasised exposure and sensitivity to perturbations and stressors (Kates, 1985; Burton et al., 1978) and worked from the hazard to the impacts (Turner et al., 2003). However, several inadequacies became apparent. Principally, it does not treat the ways in which the systems in question amplify or attenuate the impacts of the hazard (Martine & Guzman, 2002). Neither does the model address the distinction among exposed subsystems and components that lead to significant variations in the consequences of the hazards, or the role of political economy in shaping differential exposure and consequences (Blaikie et al., 1994, Hewitt, 1997). This led to the development of the PAR model.

Pressure and Release (PAR) Model

 
Pressure and Release (PAR) model after Blaikie et al. (1994) showing the progression of vulnerability. The diagram shows a disaster as the intersection between socio-economic pressures on the left and physical exposures (natural hazards) on the right
The PAR model understands a disaster as the intersection between socio-economic pressure and physical exposure. Risk is explicitly defined as a function of the perturbation, stressor, or stress and the vulnerability of the exposed unit (Blaikie et al, 1994). In this way, it directs attention to the conditions that make exposure unsafe, leading to vulnerability and to the causes creating these conditions. Used primarily to address social groups facing disaster events, the model emphasises distinctions in vulnerability by different exposure units such as social class and ethnicity. The model distinguishes between three components on the social side: root causes, dynamic pressures and unsafe conditions, and one component on the natural side, the natural hazards itself. Principal root causes include “economic, demographic and political processes”, which affect the allocation and distribution of resources between different groups of people. Dynamic Pressures translate economic and political processes in local circumstances (e.g. migration patterns). Unsafe conditions are the specific forms in which vulnerability is expressed in time and space, such as those induced by the physical environment, local economy or social relations (Blaikie, Cannon et al. 1994).
Although explicitly highlighting vulnerability, the PAR model appears insufficiently comprehensive for the broader concerns of sustainability science (Turner et al., 2003). Primarily, it does not address the coupled human environment system in the sense of considering the vulnerability of biophysical subsystems (Kasperson et al, 2003) and it provides little detail on the structure of the hazard's causal sequence. The model also tends to underplay feedback beyond the system of analysis that the integrative RH models included (Kates, 1985).[12]

Criticism

Some authors criticise the conceptualisation of social vulnerability for overemphasising the social, political and economical processes and structures that lead to vulnerable conditions. Inherent in such a view is the tendency to understand people as passive victims (Hewitt 1997) and to neglect the subjective and intersubjective interpretation and perception of disastrous events. Bankoff criticises the very basis of the concept, since in his view it is shaped by a knowledge system that was developed and formed within the academic environment of western countries and therefore inevitably represents values and principles of that culture. According to Bankoff the ultimate aim underlying this concept is to depict large parts of the world as dangerous and hostile to provide further justification for interference and intervention (Bankoff 2003).

Current and future research

Social vulnerability research has become a deeply interdisciplinary science, rooted in the modern realization that humans are the causal agents of disasters – i.e., disasters are never natural, but a consequence of human behavior. The desire to understand geographic, historic, and socio-economic characteristics of social vulnerability motivates much of the research being conducted around the world today.

Two principal goals are currently driving the field of social vulnerability research:

  1. The design of models which explain vulnerability and the root causes which create it, and
  2. The development of indicators and indexes which attempt to map vulnerability over time and space (Villágran de León 2006).

The temporal and spatial aspects of vulnerability science are pervasive, particularly in research that attempts to demonstrate the impact of development on social vulnerability. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are increasingly being used to map vulnerability, and to better understand how various phenomena (hydrological, meteorological, geophysical, social, political and economic) effect human populations.

Researchers have yet to develop reliable models capable of predicting future outcomes based upon existing theories and data. Designing and testing the validity of such models, particularly at the sub-national scale at which vulnerability reduction takes place, is expected to become a major component of social vulnerability research in the future.

An even greater aspiration in social vulnerability research is the search for one, broadly applicable theory, which can be applied systematically at a variety of scales, all over the world. Climate change scientists, building engineers, public health specialists, and many other related professions have already achieved major strides in reaching common approaches. Some social vulnerability scientists argue that it is time for them to do the same, and they are creating a variety of new forums in order to seek a consensus on common frameworks, standards, tools, and research priorities. Many academic, policy, and public/NGO organizations promote a globally applicable approach in social vulnerability science and policy (see section 5 for links to some of these institutions).

Disasters often expose pre-existing societal inequalities that lead to disproportionate loss of property, injury, and death (Wisner, Blaikie, Cannon, & Davis, 2004). Some disaster researchers argue that particular groups of people are placed disproportionately at-risk to hazards. Minorities, immigrants, women, children, the poor, as well as people with disabilities are among those have been identified as particularly vulnerable to the impacts of disaster (Cutter et al., 2003; Peek, 2008; Stough, Sharp, Decker & Wilker, 2010).

Since 2005, the Spanish Red Cross has developed a set of indicators to measure the multi-dimensional aspects of social vulnerability. These indicators are generated through the statistical analysis of more than 500 thousand people who are suffering from economic strain and social vulnerability and have a personal record containing 220 variables at the Red Cross database. An Index on Social Vulnerability in Spain is produced annually, both for adults and for children.

Researchers have noted that social vulnerability may be shaped by communication-related factors. People may become more vulnerable if they have trouble accessing, processing, or reacting upon information about risks and hazards.[13]

Collective vulnerability

Collective vulnerability is a state in which the integrity and social fabric of a community is or was threatened through traumatic events or repeated collective violence.[14] In addition, according to the collective vulnerability hypothesis, shared experience of vulnerability and the loss of shared normative references can lead to collective reactions aimed to reestablish the lost norms and trigger forms of collective resilience.[15]

This theory has been developed by social psychologists to study the support for human rights. It is rooted in the consideration that devastating collective events are sometimes followed by claims for measures that may prevent that similar event will happen again. For instance, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was a direct consequence of World War II horrors. Psychological research by Willem Doise and colleagues shows indeed that after people have experienced a collective injustice, they are more likely to support the reinforcement of human rights.[16] Populations who collectively endured systematic human rights violations are more critical of national authorities and less tolerant of rights violations.[17] Some analyses performed by Dario Spini, Guy Elcheroth and Rachel Fasel[18] on the Red Cross' “People on War” survey shows that when individuals have direct experience with the armed conflict are less keen to support humanitarian norms. However, in countries in which most of the social groups in conflict share a similar level of victimization, people express more the need for reestablishing protective social norms as the human rights, no matter the magnitude of the conflict.

Research opportunities and challenges

Research on social vulnerability is expanding rapidly to fill the research and action gaps in this field. This work can be characterized in three major groupings, including research, public awareness, and policy. The following issues have been identified as requiring further attention to understand and reduce social vulnerability (Warner and Loster 2006):

Research

1. Foster a common understanding of social vulnerability – its definition(s), theories, and measurement approaches.

2. Aim for science that produces tangible and applied outcomes.

3. Advance tools and methodologies to reliably measure social vulnerability.

Public awareness

4. Strive for better understanding of nonlinear relationships and interacting systems (environment, social and economic, hazards), and present this understanding coherently to maximize public understanding.

5. Disseminate and present results in a coherent manner for the use of lay audiences. Develop straight forward information and practical education tools.

6. Recognize the potential of the media as a bridging device between science and society.

Policy

7. Involve local communities and stakeholders considered in vulnerability studies.

8. Strengthen people's ability to help themselves, including an (audible) voice in resource allocation decisions.

9. Create partnerships that allow stakeholders from local, national, and international levels to contribute their knowledge.

10. Generate individual and local trust and ownership of vulnerability reduction efforts.

Debate and ongoing discussion surround the causes and possible solutions to social vulnerability. In cooperation with scientists and policy experts worldwide, momentum is gathering around practice-oriented research on social vulnerability. In the future, links will be strengthened between ongoing policy and academic work to solidify the science, consolidate the research agenda, and fill knowledge gaps about causes of and solutions for social vulnerability.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Peacock, Walter G; Ragsdale, A Kathleen (1997). "Social systems, ecological networks and disasters: Toward a socio-political ecology of disasters". Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, Gender, and the Sociology of Disasters. pp. 20–35. doi:10.4324/9780203351628-11. ISBN 9780203351628.
  2. ^ Anderson, Mary B; Woodrow, Peter J (1998). Rising From the Ashes: Development Strategies in Times of Disaster. London: IT Publications. ISBN 978-1-85339-439-3. OCLC 878098209.
  3. ^ Alwang, Jeffrey; Siegel, PaulB.; Jorgensen, Steen (June 2001). Vulnerability: a view from different disciplines (PDF) (Report).
  4. ^ Conway, Tim; Norton, Andy (November 2002). "Nets, Ropes, Ladders and Trampolines: The Place of Social Protection within Current Debates on Poverty Reduction". Development Policy Review. 20 (5): 533–540. doi:10.1111/1467-7679.00188. S2CID 154218764.
  5. ^ The Yogyakarta Principles, Principle 9, 11 and 15
  6. ^ Weichselgartner, Juergen (1 May 2001). "Disaster mitigation: the concept of vulnerability revisited". Disaster Prevention and Management. 10 (2): 85–95. doi:10.1108/09653560110388609. ISSN 0965-3562.
  7. ^ Hewitt, Kenneth (January 1983). "Interpretations of Calamity From the Viewpoint of Human Ecology". ResearchGate. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  8. ^ Hewitt, Kenneth (1997). Regions of risk: A geographical introduction to disasters. New York, NY: Pearson Education Limited. p. 197. ISBN 0-582-21005-4.
  9. ^ Blaikie, Piers; Cannon, Terry; Davis, Ian; Wisner, Ben (January 1994). "At Risk: Natural Hazards, People Vulnerability and Disasters". ResearchGate. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  10. ^ O'Keefe, Phil; Westgate, Ken; Wisner, Ben (April 1976). "Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters". Nature. 260 (5552): 566–567. Bibcode:1976Natur.260..566O. doi:10.1038/260566a0. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4275287.
  11. ^ Cutter, Susan L.; Mitchell, Jerry T.; Scott, Michael S. (December 2000). "Revealing the Vulnerability of People and Places: A Case Study of Georgetown County, South Carolina". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 90 (4): 713–737. doi:10.1111/0004-5608.00219. ISSN 0004-5608. S2CID 18949024.
  12. ^ Wisner, B., P. Blaikie, T. Cannon, and I. Davis. 2004. At Risk. Natural hazards, People's Vulnerability and Disasters. New York: Routledge.
  13. ^ Hansson, Sten; Orru, Kati; Siibak, Andra; Bäck, Asta; Krüger, Marco; Gabel, Friedrich; Morsut, Claudia (2020). "Communication-related vulnerability to disasters: A heuristic framework". International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 51: 101931. doi:10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101931. ISSN 2212-4209. S2CID 228814240.
  14. ^ Abramowitz, Sharon A. (2005). "The poor have become rich, and the rich have become poor: Collective trauma in the Guinean Languette". Social Science & Medicine. 61 (10): 2106–2118. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.03.023. PMID 16125293.
  15. ^ Elcheroth, Guy (2006). "Individual-level and community-level effects of war trauma on social representations related to humanitarian law". European Journal of Social Psychology. 36 (6): 907–930. doi:10.1002/ejsp.330. ISSN 1099-0992.
  16. ^ Doise, Willem, Spini, Dario, Clémence, Alain (1999). "Human rights studied as social representations in a cross-national context". European Journal of Social Psychology. 29: 1–29. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1099-0992(199902)29:1<1::AID-EJSP909>3.0.CO;2-#. ISSN 1099-0992.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Elcheroth, Guy; Spini, Dario (2009). "Public Support for the Prosecution of Human Rights Violations in the Former Yugoslavia". Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology. 15 (2): 189–214. doi:10.1080/10781910902837321. ISSN 1078-1919.
  18. ^ Spini, Dario; Elcheroth, Guy; Fasel, Rachel (2008). "The Impact of Group Norms and Generalization of Risks across Groups on Judgments of War Behavior". Political Psychology. 29 (6): 919–941. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9221.2008.00673.x. ISSN 1467-9221.

Sources

  • Bankoff, G. (2003). Cultures of Disaster: Society and natural hazards in the Philippines. London, RoutledgeCurzon.
  • Blaikie, P., T. Cannon, I. Davis & B. Wisner. (1994). At Risk: Natural hazards, People's vulnerability, and disasters. London, Routledge.
  • Cannon, T., J. Twigg, et al. (2005). Social Vulnerability, Sustainable Livelihoods and Disasters, Report to DFID Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance Department (CHAD) and Sustainable Livelihoods Support Office. London, DFID: 63.
  • Chambers, R. (1989). "Editorial Introduction: Vulnerability, Coping and Policy." IDS Bulletin 20(2): 7.
  • Chavez-Alvarado, R.; Sanchez-Gonzalez, D. (2016). "Vulnerable aging in flooded households and adaptation to climate change in cities in Latin America: the case of Monterrey", Papeles de Poblacion 22(90), 9-42.
  • Cutter, Susan L.; Boruff, Bryan J.; Shirley, W. Lynn (2003). "Social Vulnerability to Environmental Hazards". Social Science Quarterly. 84 (2): 242–261. doi:10.1111/1540-6237.8402002.
  • Cutter, Susan L.; Mitchell, Jerry T.; Scott, Michael S. (1 December 2000). "Revealing the Vulnerability of People and Places: A Case Study of Georgetown County, South Carolina". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 90 (4): 713–737. doi:10.1111/0004-5608.00219. S2CID 18949024.
  • Frankenberger, T. R., M. Drinkwater, et al. (2000). Operationalizing household livelihood security: a holistic approach for addressing poverty and vulnerability. Forum on Operationalising Sustainable Livelihoods Approaches. Pontignano (Siena), FAO.
  • Henninger, N. (1998). Mapping and Geographic Analysis of Human Welfare and Poverty: Review and Assessment. Washington DC, World Resources Institute.
  • Hewitt, K., Ed. (1983). Interpretation of Calamity: From the Viewpoint of Human Ecology. Boston, Allen.
  • Hewitt, K. (1997). Regions of Risk: A Geographical Introduction to Disasters. Essex, Longman.
  • O'Keefe, Phil; Westgate, Ken; Wisner, Ben (April 1976). "Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters". Nature. 260 (5552): 566–567. Bibcode:1976Natur.260..566O. doi:10.1038/260566a0. S2CID 4275287.
  • Oliver-Smith, Anthony (2003). "Theorizing Vulnerability in a Globalized World: A Political Ecological Perspective". In Bankoff, Greg; Frerks, Georg; Hilhorst, Dorothea (eds.). Mapping Vulnerability: Disasters, Development and People. London: Routledge. pp. 10–24. doi:10.4324/9781849771924. ISBN 9781849771924.
  • Oliver-Smith, A. and S. M. Hoffman (2002). Theorizing Disasters: Nature, Power and Culture. Theorizing Disasters: Nature, Power and Culture (Catastrophe and Culture: The Anthropology of Disaster). A. Oliver-Smith. Santa Fe, School of American Research Press.
  • Peek, Lori (2008). "Children and Disasters: Understanding Vulnerability, Developing Capacities, and Promoting Resilience — An Introduction". Children, Youth and Environments. 18 (1): 1–29. JSTOR 10.7721/chilyoutenvi.18.1.0001.
  • Prowse, Martin (2003). "Towards a Clearer Understanding of 'Vulnerability' in Relation to Chronic Poverty". doi:10.2139/ssrn.1754445. S2CID 53555536. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Sánchez-González, Diego; Egea-Jiménez, Carmen (September 2011). "Enfoque de vulnerabilidad social para investigar las desventajas socioambientales: Su aplicación en el estudio de los adultos mayores" [Social Vulnerability approach to investigate the social and environmental disadvantages. Its application in the study of elderly people]. Papeles de población (in Spanish). 17 (69): 151–185.
  • Stough, Laura M.; Sharp, Amy N.; Decker, Curt; Wilker, Nachama (2010). "Disaster case management and individuals with disabilities". Rehabilitation Psychology. 55 (3): 211–220. doi:10.1037/a0020079. hdl:1969.1/153155. PMID 20804264.
  • Villágran de León, J. C. (2006). "Vulnerability Assessment in the Context of Disaster-Risk, a Conceptual and Methodological Review."[verification needed]
  • Warner, K. and T. Loster (2006). A research and action agenda for social vulnerability. Bonn, United Nations University Institute of Environment and Human Security.[verification needed]
  • Watts, Michael J.; Bohle, Hans G. (March 1993). "The space of vulnerability: the causal structure of hunger and famine". Progress in Human Geography. 17 (1): 43–67. doi:10.1177/030913259301700103. S2CID 144615849.
  • Wisner, B, Blaikie, P., T. Cannon, Davis, I. (2004). At Risk: Natural hazards, people's vulnerability and disasters. 2nd edition, London, Routledge.

Further reading

Overview
  • Adger, W. Neil. 2006. Vulnerability. Global Environmental Change 16 (3):268-281.
  • Cutter, Susan L., Bryan J. Boruff, and W. Lynn Shirley. 2003. Social vulnerability to environmental hazards. Social Science Quarterly 84 (2):242-261.
  • Gallopín, Gilberto C. 2006. Linkages between vulnerability, resilience, and adaptive capacity. Global Environmental Change 16 (3):293-303.
  • Oliver-Smith, Anthony. 2004. Theorizing vulnerability in a globalized world: a political ecological perspective. In Mapping vulnerability: disasters, development & people, edited by G. Bankoff, G. Frerks and D. Hilhorst. Sterling, VA: Earthscan, 10–24.
Natural hazards paradigm
  • Burton, Ian, Robert W. Kates, and Gilbert F. White. 1993. The environment as hazard. 2nd ed. New York: Guildford Press.
  • Kates, Robert W. 1971. Natural hazard in human ecological perspectives: hypotheses and models. Economic Geography 47 (3):438-451.
  • Mitchell, James K. 2001. What's in a name?: issues of terminology and language in hazards research (Editorial). Environmental Hazards 2:87-88.
Political-ecological tradition
  • Blaikie, Piers, Terry Cannon, Ian Davis and Ben Wisner. 1994. At risk: natural hazards, people's vulnerability, and disasters. ist ed. London: Routledge. (see below under Wisner for 2nd edition)
  • Bohle, H. G., T. E. Downing, and M. J. Watts. 1994. Climate change and social vulnerability: the sociology and geography of food insecurity. Global Environmental Change 4:37-48.
  • Morel, Raymond. "L4D Learning for Democracy: Pre-industrial societies and strategies for the exploitation of resources: a theoretical framework for understanding why some settlements are resilient and some settlements are vulnerable to crisis - Daniel Curtis".
  • Langridge, R.; J. Christian-Smith; and K.A. Lohse. "Access and Resilience: Analyzing the Construction of Social Resilience to the Threat of Water Scarcity" Ecology and Society 11(2): insight section.
  • O'Brien, P., and Robin Leichenko. 2000. Double exposure: assessing the impacts of climate change within the context of economic globalization. Global Environmental Change 10 (3):221-232.
  • Quarantelli, E. L. 1989. Conceptualizing disasters from a sociological perspective. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters 7 (3):243-251.
  • Sarewitz, Daniel, Roger Pielke, Jr., and Mojdeh Keykhah. 2003. Vulnerability and risk: some thoughts from a political and policy perspective. Risk Analysis 23 (4):805-810.
  • Tierney, Kathleen J. 1999. Toward a critical sociology of risk. Sociological Forum 14 (2):215-242.
  • Wisner, B., Blaikie, Piers, Terry Cannon, Ian Davis. 2004. At risk: natural hazards, people's vulnerability, and disasters. 2nd ed. London: Routledge.
Human-ecological tradition
  • Brooks, Nick, W. Neil Adger, and P. Mick Kelly. 2005. The determinants of vulnerability and adaptive capacity at the national level and the implications for adaptation. Global Environmental Change 15 (2):151-163.
  • Comfort, L., Ben Wisner, Susan L. Cutter, R. Pulwarty, Kenneth Hewitt, Anthony Oliver-Smith, J. Wiener, M. Fordham, W. Peacock, and F. Krimgold. 1999. Reframing disaster policy: the global evolution of vulnerable communities. Environmental Hazards 1 (1):39-44.
  • Cutter, Susan L. 1996. Vulnerability to environmental hazards. Progress in Human Geography 20 (4):529-539.
  • Dow, Kirsten. 1992. Exploring differences in our common future(s): the meaning of vulnerability to global environmental change. Geoforum 23:417-436.
  • Liverman, Diana. 1990. Vulnerability to global environmental change. In Understanding global environmental change: the contributions of risk analysis and management, edited by R. E. Kasperson, K. Dow, D. Golding and J. X. Kasperson. Worcester, MA: Clark University, 27–44.
  • Peek, L., & Stough, L. M. (2010). Children with disabilities in the context of disaster: A social vulnerability perspective. Child Development, 81(4), 1260–1270.
  • Turner, B. L.; Kasperson, Roger E.; Matson, Pamela A.; McCarthy, James J.; Corell, Robert W.; Christensen, Lindsey; Eckley, Noelle; Kasperson, Jeanne X.; Luers, Amy; Martello, Marybeth L.; Polsky, Colin; Pulsipher, Alexander; Schiller, Andrew (8 July 2003). "A framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 100 (14): 8074–8079. doi:10.1073/pnas.1231335100. PMC 166184. PMID 12792023.
Research Needs
  • Cutter, Susan L. 2001. A research agenda for vulnerability science and environmental hazards [Internet]. International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change [cited August 18, 2006]. Available from .
  • Young, Oran R.; Berkhout, Frans; Gallopin, Gilberto C.; Janssen, Marco A.; Ostrom, Elinor; van der Leeuw, Sander (1 August 2006). "The globalization of socio-ecological systems: An agenda for scientific research". Global Environmental Change. 16 (3): 304–316. doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2006.03.004.

External links

  • Social Vulnerability in Spain (applied research based on a set of indicators which cover the muldimensional aspects of social vulnerability, by means of a database specifically designed by the Spanish Red Cross- information in Spanish, executive summaries available also in English language)
  • Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center, Texas A&M University
  • Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute, University of South Carolina
  • Munich Re Foundation
  • Radical Interpretations of Disaster (RADIX)
  • , International Labour Organization
  • Social protection, World Bank
  • Nations University’s Institute for Environment & Human Security[permanent dead link]
  • Understanding Katrina: Perspectives from the Social Sciences
  • Vulnerability Net
  • Centers For Disease Control and Prevention - Social Vulnerability Index: Ranking all U.S tracts using 15 Census and American Community Survey indicators
  • Dídac Sánchez Foundation

social, vulnerability, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, consis. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting November 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In its broadest sense social vulnerability is one dimension of vulnerability to multiple stressors and shocks including abuse social exclusion and natural hazards Social vulnerability refers to the inability of people organizations and societies to withstand adverse impacts from multiple stressors to which they are exposed These impacts are due in part to characteristics inherent in social interactions institutions and systems of cultural values Because it is most apparent when calamity occurs many studies of social vulnerability are found in risk management literature 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 Definitions 2 History of the concept 3 Within society 3 1 Models 3 1 1 Risk Hazard RH Model 3 1 2 Pressure and Release PAR Model 4 Criticism 5 Current and future research 6 Collective vulnerability 7 Research opportunities and challenges 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Sources 9 3 Further reading 10 External linksDefinitions Edit Vulnerability derives from the Latin word vulnerare to wound and describes the potential to be harmed physically and or psychologically Vulnerability is often understood as the counterpart of resilience and is increasingly studied in linked social ecological systems The Yogyakarta Principles one of the international human rights instruments use the term vulnerability as such potential to abuse or social exclusion 5 The concept of social vulnerability emerged most recently within the discourse on natural hazards and disasters To date no one definition has been agreed upon Similarly multiple theories of social vulnerability exist 6 Most work conducted so far focuses on empirical observation and conceptual models Thus current social vulnerability research is a middle range theory and represents an attempt to understand the social conditions that transform a natural hazard e g flood earthquake mass movements etc into a social disaster The concept emphasizes two central themes Both the causes and the phenomenon of disasters are defined by social processes and structures Thus it is not only a geo or biophysical hazard but rather the social context that needs to be considered to understand natural disasters 7 Although different groups of a society may share a similar exposure to a natural hazard the hazard has varying consequences for these groups since they have diverging capacities and abilities to handle the impact of a hazard Taking a structuralist view Hewitt 8 defines vulnerability as being essentially about the human ecology of endangerment and is embedded in the social geography of settlements and lands uses and the space of distribution of influence in communities and political organisation This contrasts with the more socially focused view of Blaikie et al 9 who define vulnerability as the set of characteristics of a group or individual in terms of their capacity to anticipate cope with resist and recover from the impact of a natural hazard It involves a combination of factors that determine the degree to which someone s life and livelihood is at risk by a discrete and identifiable event in nature or society History of the concept EditIn the 1970s the concept of vulnerability was introduced within the discourse on natural hazards and disaster by O Keefe Westgate and Wisner 10 In taking the naturalness out of natural disasters these authors insisted that socio economic conditions are the causes for natural disasters The work illustrated by means of empirical data that the occurrence of disasters increased over the last 50 years paralleled by an increasing loss of life The work also showed that the greatest losses of life concentrate in underdeveloped countries where the authors concluded that vulnerability is increasing Chambers put these empirical findings on a conceptual level and argued that vulnerability has an external and internal side People are exposed to specific natural and social risk At the same time people possess different capacities to deal with their exposure by means of various strategies of action Chambers 1989 This argument was again refined by Blaikie Cannon Davis and Wisner who went on to develop the Pressure and Release Model PAR see below Watts and Bohle argued similarly by formalizing the social space of vulnerability which is constituted by exposure capacity and potentiality Watts and Bohle 1993 Susan Cutter developed an integrative approach hazard of place which tries to consider both multiple geo and biophysical hazards on the one hand as well as social vulnerabilities on the other hand 11 Recently Oliver Smith grasped the nature culture dichotomy by focusing both on the cultural construction of the people environment relationship and on the material production of conditions that define the social vulnerability of people Oliver Smith and Hoffman 2002 Research on social vulnerability to date has stemmed from a variety of fields in the natural and social sciences Each field has defined the concept differently manifest in a host of definitions and approaches Blaikie Cannon et al 1994 Henninger 1998 Frankenberger Drinkwater et al 2000 Alwang Siegel et al 2001 Oliver Smith 2003 Cannon Twigg et al 2005 Yet some common threads run through most of the available work Within society EditAlthough considerable research attention has examined components of biophysical vulnerability and the vulnerability of the built environment Mileti 1999 we currently know the least about the social aspects of vulnerability Cutter et al 2003 Socially created vulnerabilities are largely ignored mainly due to the difficulty in quantifying them Social vulnerability is created through the interaction of social forces and multiple stressors and it is resolved through social as opposed to individual means While individuals within a socially vulnerable context may break through the vicious cycle social vulnerability itself can persist because of structural i e social and political influences that reinforce vulnerability Social vulnerability is partially the product of social inequalities those social factors that influence or shape the susceptibility of various groups to harm and that also govern their ability to respond Cutter et al 2003 It is however important to note that social vulnerability is not registered by exposure to hazards alone but also resides in the sensitivity and resilience of the system to prepare cope and recover from such hazards Turner et al 2003 However it is also important to note that a focus limited to the stresses associated with a particular vulnerability analysis is also insufficient for understanding the impact on and responses of the affected system or its components Mileti 1999 Kaperson et al 2003 White amp Haas 1974 These issues are often underlined in attempts to model the concept see Models of Social Vulnerability Models Edit Risk Hazard RH model diagram after Turner et al 2003 showing the impact of a hazard as a function of exposure and sensitivity The chain sequence begins with the hazard and the concept of vulnerability is noted implicitly as represented by white arrows Two of the principal archetypal reduced form models of social vulnerability are presented which have informed vulnerability analysis the Risk Hazard RH model and the Pressure and Release model Risk Hazard RH Model Edit Initial RH models sought to understand the impact of a hazard as a function of exposure to the hazardous event and the sensitivity of the entity exposed Turner et al 2003 Applications of this model in environmental and climate impact assessments generally emphasised exposure and sensitivity to perturbations and stressors Kates 1985 Burton et al 1978 and worked from the hazard to the impacts Turner et al 2003 However several inadequacies became apparent Principally it does not treat the ways in which the systems in question amplify or attenuate the impacts of the hazard Martine amp Guzman 2002 Neither does the model address the distinction among exposed subsystems and components that lead to significant variations in the consequences of the hazards or the role of political economy in shaping differential exposure and consequences Blaikie et al 1994 Hewitt 1997 This led to the development of the PAR model Pressure and Release PAR Model Edit Pressure and Release PAR model after Blaikie et al 1994 showing the progression of vulnerability The diagram shows a disaster as the intersection between socio economic pressures on the left and physical exposures natural hazards on the right The PAR model understands a disaster as the intersection between socio economic pressure and physical exposure Risk is explicitly defined as a function of the perturbation stressor or stress and the vulnerability of the exposed unit Blaikie et al 1994 In this way it directs attention to the conditions that make exposure unsafe leading to vulnerability and to the causes creating these conditions Used primarily to address social groups facing disaster events the model emphasises distinctions in vulnerability by different exposure units such as social class and ethnicity The model distinguishes between three components on the social side root causes dynamic pressures and unsafe conditions and one component on the natural side the natural hazards itself Principal root causes include economic demographic and political processes which affect the allocation and distribution of resources between different groups of people Dynamic Pressures translate economic and political processes in local circumstances e g migration patterns Unsafe conditions are the specific forms in which vulnerability is expressed in time and space such as those induced by the physical environment local economy or social relations Blaikie Cannon et al 1994 Although explicitly highlighting vulnerability the PAR model appears insufficiently comprehensive for the broader concerns of sustainability science Turner et al 2003 Primarily it does not address the coupled human environment system in the sense of considering the vulnerability of biophysical subsystems Kasperson et al 2003 and it provides little detail on the structure of the hazard s causal sequence The model also tends to underplay feedback beyond the system of analysis that the integrative RH models included Kates 1985 12 Criticism EditSome authors criticise the conceptualisation of social vulnerability for overemphasising the social political and economical processes and structures that lead to vulnerable conditions Inherent in such a view is the tendency to understand people as passive victims Hewitt 1997 and to neglect the subjective and intersubjective interpretation and perception of disastrous events Bankoff criticises the very basis of the concept since in his view it is shaped by a knowledge system that was developed and formed within the academic environment of western countries and therefore inevitably represents values and principles of that culture According to Bankoff the ultimate aim underlying this concept is to depict large parts of the world as dangerous and hostile to provide further justification for interference and intervention Bankoff 2003 Current and future research EditSocial vulnerability research has become a deeply interdisciplinary science rooted in the modern realization that humans are the causal agents of disasters i e disasters are never natural but a consequence of human behavior The desire to understand geographic historic and socio economic characteristics of social vulnerability motivates much of the research being conducted around the world today Two principal goals are currently driving the field of social vulnerability research The design of models which explain vulnerability and the root causes which create it and The development of indicators and indexes which attempt to map vulnerability over time and space Villagran de Leon 2006 The temporal and spatial aspects of vulnerability science are pervasive particularly in research that attempts to demonstrate the impact of development on social vulnerability Geographic Information Systems GIS are increasingly being used to map vulnerability and to better understand how various phenomena hydrological meteorological geophysical social political and economic effect human populations Researchers have yet to develop reliable models capable of predicting future outcomes based upon existing theories and data Designing and testing the validity of such models particularly at the sub national scale at which vulnerability reduction takes place is expected to become a major component of social vulnerability research in the future An even greater aspiration in social vulnerability research is the search for one broadly applicable theory which can be applied systematically at a variety of scales all over the world Climate change scientists building engineers public health specialists and many other related professions have already achieved major strides in reaching common approaches Some social vulnerability scientists argue that it is time for them to do the same and they are creating a variety of new forums in order to seek a consensus on common frameworks standards tools and research priorities Many academic policy and public NGO organizations promote a globally applicable approach in social vulnerability science and policy see section 5 for links to some of these institutions Disasters often expose pre existing societal inequalities that lead to disproportionate loss of property injury and death Wisner Blaikie Cannon amp Davis 2004 Some disaster researchers argue that particular groups of people are placed disproportionately at risk to hazards Minorities immigrants women children the poor as well as people with disabilities are among those have been identified as particularly vulnerable to the impacts of disaster Cutter et al 2003 Peek 2008 Stough Sharp Decker amp Wilker 2010 Since 2005 the Spanish Red Cross has developed a set of indicators to measure the multi dimensional aspects of social vulnerability These indicators are generated through the statistical analysis of more than 500 thousand people who are suffering from economic strain and social vulnerability and have a personal record containing 220 variables at the Red Cross database An Index on Social Vulnerability in Spain is produced annually both for adults and for children Researchers have noted that social vulnerability may be shaped by communication related factors People may become more vulnerable if they have trouble accessing processing or reacting upon information about risks and hazards 13 Collective vulnerability EditCollective vulnerability is a state in which the integrity and social fabric of a community is or was threatened through traumatic events or repeated collective violence 14 In addition according to the collective vulnerability hypothesis shared experience of vulnerability and the loss of shared normative references can lead to collective reactions aimed to reestablish the lost norms and trigger forms of collective resilience 15 This theory has been developed by social psychologists to study the support for human rights It is rooted in the consideration that devastating collective events are sometimes followed by claims for measures that may prevent that similar event will happen again For instance the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was a direct consequence of World War II horrors Psychological research by Willem Doise and colleagues shows indeed that after people have experienced a collective injustice they are more likely to support the reinforcement of human rights 16 Populations who collectively endured systematic human rights violations are more critical of national authorities and less tolerant of rights violations 17 Some analyses performed by Dario Spini Guy Elcheroth and Rachel Fasel 18 on the Red Cross People on War survey shows that when individuals have direct experience with the armed conflict are less keen to support humanitarian norms However in countries in which most of the social groups in conflict share a similar level of victimization people express more the need for reestablishing protective social norms as the human rights no matter the magnitude of the conflict Research opportunities and challenges EditResearch on social vulnerability is expanding rapidly to fill the research and action gaps in this field This work can be characterized in three major groupings including research public awareness and policy The following issues have been identified as requiring further attention to understand and reduce social vulnerability Warner and Loster 2006 Research1 Foster a common understanding of social vulnerability its definition s theories and measurement approaches 2 Aim for science that produces tangible and applied outcomes 3 Advance tools and methodologies to reliably measure social vulnerability Public awareness4 Strive for better understanding of nonlinear relationships and interacting systems environment social and economic hazards and present this understanding coherently to maximize public understanding 5 Disseminate and present results in a coherent manner for the use of lay audiences Develop straight forward information and practical education tools 6 Recognize the potential of the media as a bridging device between science and society Policy7 Involve local communities and stakeholders considered in vulnerability studies 8 Strengthen people s ability to help themselves including an audible voice in resource allocation decisions 9 Create partnerships that allow stakeholders from local national and international levels to contribute their knowledge 10 Generate individual and local trust and ownership of vulnerability reduction efforts Debate and ongoing discussion surround the causes and possible solutions to social vulnerability In cooperation with scientists and policy experts worldwide momentum is gathering around practice oriented research on social vulnerability In the future links will be strengthened between ongoing policy and academic work to solidify the science consolidate the research agenda and fill knowledge gaps about causes of and solutions for social vulnerability See also EditDisadvantaged Vulnerability index Vulnerability assessmentReferences EditNotes Edit Peacock Walter G Ragsdale A Kathleen 1997 Social systems ecological networks and disasters Toward a socio political ecology of disasters Hurricane Andrew Ethnicity Gender and the Sociology of Disasters pp 20 35 doi 10 4324 9780203351628 11 ISBN 9780203351628 Anderson Mary B Woodrow Peter J 1998 Rising From the Ashes Development Strategies in Times of Disaster London IT Publications ISBN 978 1 85339 439 3 OCLC 878098209 Alwang Jeffrey Siegel PaulB Jorgensen Steen June 2001 Vulnerability a view from different disciplines PDF Report Conway Tim Norton Andy November 2002 Nets Ropes Ladders and Trampolines The Place of Social Protection within Current Debates on Poverty Reduction Development Policy Review 20 5 533 540 doi 10 1111 1467 7679 00188 S2CID 154218764 The Yogyakarta Principles Principle 9 11 and 15 Weichselgartner Juergen 1 May 2001 Disaster mitigation the concept of vulnerability revisited Disaster Prevention and Management 10 2 85 95 doi 10 1108 09653560110388609 ISSN 0965 3562 Hewitt Kenneth January 1983 Interpretations of Calamity From the Viewpoint of Human Ecology ResearchGate Retrieved March 13 2022 Hewitt Kenneth 1997 Regions of risk A geographical introduction to disasters New York NY Pearson Education Limited p 197 ISBN 0 582 21005 4 Blaikie Piers Cannon Terry Davis Ian Wisner Ben January 1994 At Risk Natural Hazards People Vulnerability and Disasters ResearchGate Retrieved March 13 2022 O Keefe Phil Westgate Ken Wisner Ben April 1976 Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters Nature 260 5552 566 567 Bibcode 1976Natur 260 566O doi 10 1038 260566a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4275287 Cutter Susan L Mitchell Jerry T Scott Michael S December 2000 Revealing the Vulnerability of People and Places A Case Study of Georgetown County South Carolina Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90 4 713 737 doi 10 1111 0004 5608 00219 ISSN 0004 5608 S2CID 18949024 Wisner B P Blaikie T Cannon and I Davis 2004 At Risk Natural hazards People s Vulnerability and Disasters New York Routledge Hansson Sten Orru Kati Siibak Andra Back Asta Kruger Marco Gabel Friedrich Morsut Claudia 2020 Communication related vulnerability to disasters A heuristic framework International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 51 101931 doi 10 1016 j ijdrr 2020 101931 ISSN 2212 4209 S2CID 228814240 Abramowitz Sharon A 2005 The poor have become rich and the rich have become poor Collective trauma in the Guinean Languette Social Science amp Medicine 61 10 2106 2118 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2005 03 023 PMID 16125293 Elcheroth Guy 2006 Individual level and community level effects of war trauma on social representations related to humanitarian law European Journal of Social Psychology 36 6 907 930 doi 10 1002 ejsp 330 ISSN 1099 0992 Doise Willem Spini Dario Clemence Alain 1999 Human rights studied as social representations in a cross national context European Journal of Social Psychology 29 1 29 doi 10 1002 SICI 1099 0992 199902 29 1 lt 1 AID EJSP909 gt 3 0 CO 2 ISSN 1099 0992 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Elcheroth Guy Spini Dario 2009 Public Support for the Prosecution of Human Rights Violations in the Former Yugoslavia Peace and Conflict Journal of Peace Psychology 15 2 189 214 doi 10 1080 10781910902837321 ISSN 1078 1919 Spini Dario Elcheroth Guy Fasel Rachel 2008 The Impact of Group Norms and Generalization of Risks across Groups on Judgments of War Behavior Political Psychology 29 6 919 941 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9221 2008 00673 x ISSN 1467 9221 Sources Edit Bankoff G 2003 Cultures of Disaster Society and natural hazards in the Philippines London RoutledgeCurzon Blaikie P T Cannon I Davis amp B Wisner 1994 At Risk Natural hazards People s vulnerability and disasters London Routledge Cannon T J Twigg et al 2005 Social Vulnerability Sustainable Livelihoods and Disasters Report to DFID Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance Department CHAD and Sustainable Livelihoods Support Office London DFID 63 Chambers R 1989 Editorial Introduction Vulnerability Coping and Policy IDS Bulletin 20 2 7 Chavez Alvarado R Sanchez Gonzalez D 2016 Vulnerable aging in flooded households and adaptation to climate change in cities in Latin America the case of Monterrey Papeles de Poblacion 22 90 9 42 Cutter Susan L Boruff Bryan J Shirley W Lynn 2003 Social Vulnerability to Environmental Hazards Social Science Quarterly 84 2 242 261 doi 10 1111 1540 6237 8402002 Cutter Susan L Mitchell Jerry T Scott Michael S 1 December 2000 Revealing the Vulnerability of People and Places A Case Study of Georgetown County South Carolina Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90 4 713 737 doi 10 1111 0004 5608 00219 S2CID 18949024 Frankenberger T R M Drinkwater et al 2000 Operationalizing household livelihood security a holistic approach for addressing poverty and vulnerability Forum on Operationalising Sustainable Livelihoods Approaches Pontignano Siena FAO Henninger N 1998 Mapping and Geographic Analysis of Human Welfare and Poverty Review and Assessment Washington DC World Resources Institute Hewitt K Ed 1983 Interpretation of Calamity From the Viewpoint of Human Ecology Boston Allen Hewitt K 1997 Regions of Risk A Geographical Introduction to Disasters Essex Longman O Keefe Phil Westgate Ken Wisner Ben April 1976 Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters Nature 260 5552 566 567 Bibcode 1976Natur 260 566O doi 10 1038 260566a0 S2CID 4275287 Oliver Smith Anthony 2003 Theorizing Vulnerability in a Globalized World A Political Ecological Perspective In Bankoff Greg Frerks Georg Hilhorst Dorothea eds Mapping Vulnerability Disasters Development and People London Routledge pp 10 24 doi 10 4324 9781849771924 ISBN 9781849771924 Oliver Smith A and S M Hoffman 2002 Theorizing Disasters Nature Power and Culture Theorizing Disasters Nature Power and Culture Catastrophe and Culture The Anthropology of Disaster A Oliver Smith Santa Fe School of American Research Press Peek Lori 2008 Children and Disasters Understanding Vulnerability Developing Capacities and Promoting Resilience An Introduction Children Youth and Environments 18 1 1 29 JSTOR 10 7721 chilyoutenvi 18 1 0001 Prowse Martin 2003 Towards a Clearer Understanding of Vulnerability in Relation to Chronic Poverty doi 10 2139 ssrn 1754445 S2CID 53555536 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sanchez Gonzalez Diego Egea Jimenez Carmen September 2011 Enfoque de vulnerabilidad social para investigar las desventajas socioambientales Su aplicacion en el estudio de los adultos mayores Social Vulnerability approach to investigate the social and environmental disadvantages Its application in the study of elderly people Papeles de poblacion in Spanish 17 69 151 185 Stough Laura M Sharp Amy N Decker Curt Wilker Nachama 2010 Disaster case management and individuals with disabilities Rehabilitation Psychology 55 3 211 220 doi 10 1037 a0020079 hdl 1969 1 153155 PMID 20804264 Villagran de Leon J C 2006 Vulnerability Assessment in the Context of Disaster Risk a Conceptual and Methodological Review verification needed Warner K and T Loster 2006 A research and action agenda for social vulnerability Bonn United Nations University Institute of Environment and Human Security verification needed Watts Michael J Bohle Hans G March 1993 The space of vulnerability the causal structure of hunger and famine Progress in Human Geography 17 1 43 67 doi 10 1177 030913259301700103 S2CID 144615849 Wisner B Blaikie P T Cannon Davis I 2004 At Risk Natural hazards people s vulnerability and disasters 2nd edition London Routledge Further reading Edit OverviewAdger W Neil 2006 Vulnerability Global Environmental Change 16 3 268 281 Cutter Susan L Bryan J Boruff and W Lynn Shirley 2003 Social vulnerability to environmental hazards Social Science Quarterly 84 2 242 261 Gallopin Gilberto C 2006 Linkages between vulnerability resilience and adaptive capacity Global Environmental Change 16 3 293 303 Oliver Smith Anthony 2004 Theorizing vulnerability in a globalized world a political ecological perspective In Mapping vulnerability disasters development amp people edited by G Bankoff G Frerks and D Hilhorst Sterling VA Earthscan 10 24 Natural hazards paradigmBurton Ian Robert W Kates and Gilbert F White 1993 The environment as hazard 2nd ed New York Guildford Press Kates Robert W 1971 Natural hazard in human ecological perspectives hypotheses and models Economic Geography 47 3 438 451 Mitchell James K 2001 What s in a name issues of terminology and language in hazards research Editorial Environmental Hazards 2 87 88 Political ecological traditionBlaikie Piers Terry Cannon Ian Davis and Ben Wisner 1994 At risk natural hazards people s vulnerability and disasters ist ed London Routledge see below under Wisner for 2nd edition Bohle H G T E Downing and M J Watts 1994 Climate change and social vulnerability the sociology and geography of food insecurity Global Environmental Change 4 37 48 Morel Raymond L4D Learning for Democracy Pre industrial societies and strategies for the exploitation of resources a theoretical framework for understanding why some settlements are resilient and some settlements are vulnerable to crisis Daniel Curtis Langridge R J Christian Smith and K A Lohse Access and Resilience Analyzing the Construction of Social Resilience to the Threat of Water Scarcity Ecology and Society 11 2 insight section O Brien P and Robin Leichenko 2000 Double exposure assessing the impacts of climate change within the context of economic globalization Global Environmental Change 10 3 221 232 Quarantelli E L 1989 Conceptualizing disasters from a sociological perspective International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters 7 3 243 251 Sarewitz Daniel Roger Pielke Jr and Mojdeh Keykhah 2003 Vulnerability and risk some thoughts from a political and policy perspective Risk Analysis 23 4 805 810 Tierney Kathleen J 1999 Toward a critical sociology of risk Sociological Forum 14 2 215 242 Wisner B Blaikie Piers Terry Cannon Ian Davis 2004 At risk natural hazards people s vulnerability and disasters 2nd ed London Routledge Human ecological traditionBrooks Nick W Neil Adger and P Mick Kelly 2005 The determinants of vulnerability and adaptive capacity at the national level and the implications for adaptation Global Environmental Change 15 2 151 163 Comfort L Ben Wisner Susan L Cutter R Pulwarty Kenneth Hewitt Anthony Oliver Smith J Wiener M Fordham W Peacock and F Krimgold 1999 Reframing disaster policy the global evolution of vulnerable communities Environmental Hazards 1 1 39 44 Cutter Susan L 1996 Vulnerability to environmental hazards Progress in Human Geography 20 4 529 539 Dow Kirsten 1992 Exploring differences in our common future s the meaning of vulnerability to global environmental change Geoforum 23 417 436 Liverman Diana 1990 Vulnerability to global environmental change In Understanding global environmental change the contributions of risk analysis and management edited by R E Kasperson K Dow D Golding and J X Kasperson Worcester MA Clark University 27 44 Peek L amp Stough L M 2010 Children with disabilities in the context of disaster A social vulnerability perspective Child Development 81 4 1260 1270 Turner B L Kasperson Roger E Matson Pamela A McCarthy James J Corell Robert W Christensen Lindsey Eckley Noelle Kasperson Jeanne X Luers Amy Martello Marybeth L Polsky Colin Pulsipher Alexander Schiller Andrew 8 July 2003 A framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100 14 8074 8079 doi 10 1073 pnas 1231335100 PMC 166184 PMID 12792023 Research NeedsCutter Susan L 2001 A research agenda for vulnerability science and environmental hazards Internet International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change cited August 18 2006 Available from https web archive org web 20070213050141 http www ihdp uni bonn de html publications publications html Young Oran R Berkhout Frans Gallopin Gilberto C Janssen Marco A Ostrom Elinor van der Leeuw Sander 1 August 2006 The globalization of socio ecological systems An agenda for scientific research Global Environmental Change 16 3 304 316 doi 10 1016 j gloenvcha 2006 03 004 External links EditSocial Vulnerability in Spain applied research based on a set of indicators which cover the muldimensional aspects of social vulnerability by means of a database specifically designed by the Spanish Red Cross information in Spanish executive summaries available also in English language Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center Texas A amp M University Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute University of South Carolina Livelihoods and Institutions Group Natural Resources Institute Munich Re Foundation National University of Colombia Working Group on Disaster Management Radical Interpretations of Disaster RADIX Social protection International Labour Organization Social protection World Bank Nations University s Institute for Environment amp Human Security permanent dead link Understanding Katrina Perspectives from the Social Sciences Vulnerability Net Centers For Disease Control and Prevention Social Vulnerability Index Ranking all U S tracts using 15 Census and American Community Survey indicators Didac Sanchez Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social vulnerability amp oldid 1136328325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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