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Wikipedia

Vulnerability

Vulnerability refers to "the quality or state of being exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed, either physically or emotionally."[1]

A window of vulnerability (WOV) is a time frame within which defensive measures are diminished, compromised, or lacking.[2]

The understanding of social and environmental vulnerability, as a methodological approach, involves the analysis of the risks and assets of disadvantaged groups, such as the elderly. The approach of vulnerability in itself brings great expectations of social policy and gerontological planning.[3][4] Types of vulnerability include social, cognitive, environmental, emotional or military.

In relation to hazards and disasters, vulnerability is a concept that links the relationship that people have with their environment to social forces and institutions and the cultural values that sustain and contest them. "The concept of vulnerability expresses the multi-dimensionality of disasters by focusing attention on the totality of relationships in a given social situation which constitute a condition that, in combination with environmental forces, produces a disaster".[5] It is also the extent to which changes could harm a system, or to which the community can be affected by the impact of a hazard or exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed, either physically or emotionally.

Within the body of literature related to vulnerability, one major research stream includes the methodology behind said research, namely measuring and assessing indicators of vulnerability. These include external—sudden shocks and continued stresses—and internal indicators, such as defenselessness or inability to cope with incapacities.[6] Vulnerability research covers a complex, multidisciplinary field including development and poverty studies, public health, climate studies, studies, engineering, geography, political ecology, and disaster risk management.[7] This research is of importance and interest for organizations trying to reduce vulnerability[8] – especially as related to poverty and other Millennium Development Goals. Many institutions are conducting interdisciplinary research on vulnerability. A forum that brings many of the current researchers on vulnerability together is the Expert Working Group (EWG). Researchers are currently working to refine definitions of "vulnerability", measurement and assessment methods, and effective communication of research to decision makers.[9][10]

Types edit

Social edit

Social vulnerability is one dimension of vulnerability that responds to multiple stressors (agent responsible for stress) 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.[11][12] It was also found that marital status, employment, and income have an impact on the level of vulnerability presented in individuals.[13] In this respect, there is a need to place an increased emphasis on assets and entitlements for understanding 'catastrophe' as opposed to solely the strength or severity of shocks.[14] The capacity of individuals, communities and systems to survive, adapt, transform, and grow in the face of stress and shocks increase when conditions require it.[15] Building resilience is about making people, communities, and systems better prepared to withstand catastrophic events—both natural and man-made—and able to bounce back more quickly and emerge stronger from these shocks and stresses.[16]

Cognitive edit

A cognitive vulnerability, in cognitive psychology, is an erroneous belief, cognitive bias, or pattern of thought that is believed to predispose the individual to psychological problems.[17] Cognitive vulnerability is in place before the symptoms of psychological disorders start to appear, such as high neuroticism.[18] After the individual encounters a stressful experience, the cognitive vulnerability shapes a maladaptive response that may lead to a psychological disorder.[17] In psychopathology, cognitive vulnerability is constructed from schema models, hopelessness models, and attachment theory.[19] The attachment theory states that humans need to develop a close bond with their caregivers. When there is a disruption in the child-parent bonding relationship it may be associated with cognitive vulnerability and depression.[20] Attentional bias is a form of cognitive bias that can lead to cognitive vulnerability. Allocating a danger level to a threat depends on the urgency or intensity of the threshold.[21] Anxiety is not associated with selective orientation.[22]

Environmental or climate change edit

Climate change vulnerability (or climate vulnerability or climate risk vulnerability) is a concept that describes how strongly people or ecosystems are likely to be affected by climate change. It is defined as the "propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected" by climate change. It can apply to humans and also to natural systems (or ecosystems).[23]: 12  Related concepts include climate sensitivity and the ability, or lack thereof, to cope and adapt.[23]: 5  Vulnerability is a component of climate risk. Vulnerability differs within communities and across societies, regions, and countries, and can increase or decrease over time.[23]: 12 

Emotional edit

Brene Brown defines vulnerability as "uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure." Brown goes on to suggest that vulnerability is our most accurate measure of courage; we allow ourselves to be seen when we are vulnerable.[24] Brené Brown teaches her followers that vulnerability is typically thought of as the center of emotions, such as grief, shame, fear, and disappointment, but it is also the center and birthplace of love, belonging, authenticity, creativity, courage, and accountability.[25] Selective reinforcement and modeling has been used to help children learn from a young age how to regulate and take accountability for their emotions. Unpleasant emotional states are managed by their subjective discomfort.[26] Emotional vulnerability is also impacted by respondents that express feelings of sadness about the uncertainty of climate change.[27] Increasing awareness and impact leads to heightened emotional responses. Along with this, emotional vulnerability can affect the physical well-being of older adults when they suppress their emotions in highly distressing situations.[28] When these vulnerabilities are supported through conversation with an emotionally safe "other," this vulnerability can lead to resilience and the capacity to support others.[29]

Military edit

In military terminology, vulnerability is a subset of survivability, the others being susceptibility and recoverability. Vulnerability is defined in various ways depending on the nation and service arm concerned, but in general it refers to the near-instantaneous effects of a weapon attack. In aviation it is defined as the inability of an aircraft to withstand the damage caused by the man-made hostile environment.[30] In some definitions, recoverability (damage control, firefighting, restoration of capability) is included in vulnerability. Some military services develop their own concept of vulnerability.[31]

Political edit

Political vulnerability can be understood as "the weakness of the democratic system, with its negative effects on the efficiency of public policies, the legitimacy of the government action, limited participation of citizens and the private sector in national efforts, linkage with local governments and civil organizations, the handling and management of emergencies, processing of citizen's demands and needs, and the capacity to meet them."[32] Democratic backsliding is a direct result of political vulnerability, and has been documented across the globe throughout history.[33][34] Political vulnerability can also refer to elected officials' or political candidates' chances of election, with municipal and local elections often signifying a shift one way or the other on a national scale.[35]

Invulnerability edit

Invulnerability is a common feature found in science fiction and fantasy, particularly in superhero fiction, as depicted in novels, comic books and video games. In such stories, it is a quality that makes a character impervious to pain, damage or loss of health. There are many levels of invulnerability, just like there are many level of immortality (the highest level is absolute immortality). Many superheroes in comic books have invulnerability but it is often superhuman invulnerability (aka Strength-Based Invulnerability). It means that these superheroes develop a form of relative invulnerability, the user becoming impossible to harm by beings or forces less powerful than themselves. They are immune to most kinds of attacks but they can still be hurt or even killed by stronger characters.

In video games, it can be found in the form of "power-ups" or cheats; when activated via cheats, it is often referred to as "god mode". Generally, it does not protect the player from certain instant-death hazards, most notably "bottomless" pits from which, even if the player were to survive the fall, they would be unable to escape. As a rule, invulnerability granted by power-ups is temporary, and wears off after a set amount of time, while invulnerability cheats, once activated, remain in effect until deactivated, or the end of the level is reached. "Depending on the game in question, invulnerability to damage may or may not protect the player from non-damage effects, such as being immobilized or sent flying."[36]

In mythology, talismans, charms, and amulets were created by magic users for the purpose of making the wearer immune to injury from both mystic and mundane weapons.[37]

Invulnerability in Adolescents edit

Hill, Duggan, and Lapsley state in their article that it is commonly accepted that teenagers have no regard for physical danger, which might indicate that they have a sense of danger invulnerability. Additionally, they predicted that the teenagers might have a sense of psychological invulnerability, or a sense of being able to remain unaffected by negative thoughts and emotions. In order to test the effects of both types of invulnerability, the researchers used the Adolescent Invulnerability Scale created by Lapsley and Hill in 2010, which includes twenty statements assessing to what extent the adolescents felt invulnerable psychologically and in danger situations.[38]

Hill et. al found that having a sense of psychological invulnerability benefitted adolescents in combatting negative emotions such as depression. Adolescents who rated themselves as more psychologically invulnerable demonstrated more effective coping mechanisms during times of stress or depression. This lead the researchers to believe that psychological invulnerability during adolescence is beneficial for identity formation.

Danger invulnerability highly correlated with illegal or criminal activity but had no correlation with mental health. However, danger invulnerability was able to effectively predict "delinquency, lifetime drug use, and drug use frequency." Gender differences in the data showed that adolescent males were more likely to feel invulnerable to danger and psychological effects. The researchers did not observe any difference between the ages of participants.[39]

Invulnerability in Emerging Adults edit

In this study, Lapsley and Hill (2010) created the AIS for the purpose of studying the invulnerability of college students in Barnett's emerging adulthood (hyperlink) stage of life. Researchers predicted a positive correlation between the adolescents' and emerging adults' scores and subsequently found said correlation. They observed no significant differences in negative and positive optimism biases, which were other elements of the same study. But, as predicted, male participants scored higher on both areas of invulnerability.

High danger invulnerability strongly correlated with social issues, such as risk behavior and substance use. Both types of invulnerability, psychological and danger invulnerability, proved to be high predictors of self-esteem problems in emerging adulthood.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Lexico Dictionaries - English. Archived from the original on January 18, 2021. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  2. ^ "KBpedia: Vulnerability Reference Concept". KBpedia. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  3. ^ Sanchez-Gonzalez, D.; Egea-Jimenez, C. (2011). "Social Vulnerability approach to investigate the social and environmental disadvantages. Its application in the study of elderly people". Pap. Poblac. 17 (69): 151–185.
  4. ^ Sanchez-Gonzalez, D (2015). "Physical-social environments and aging population from environmental gerontology and geography. Socio-spatial implications in Latin America". Revista de Geografía Norte Grande. 60 (60): 97–114. doi:10.4067/S0718-34022015000100006.
  5. ^ Bankoff, Greg; et al. (2004). Mapping Vulnerability: Disasters, Development and People. London: Earth scan.
  6. ^ Villa-gran, Juan Carlos. "Vulnerability: A conceptual and methodological review." SOURCE. No. 2/2006. Bonn, Germany.
  7. ^ Rumpf, Clemens M.; Lewis, Hugh G.; Atkinson, Peter M. (2017-03-27). "Population vulnerability models for asteroid impact risk assessment". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 52 (6): 1082–1102. arXiv:1702.05798. Bibcode:2017M&PS...52.1082R. doi:10.1111/maps.12861. ISSN 1086-9379. S2CID 49320450.
  8. ^ "Promotion of Roma's access to Education [Social Impact]. WORKALÓ. The creation of new occupational patterns for cultural minorities: the Gypsy Case (2001-2004). Framework Programme 5 (FP5)". SIOR, Social Impact Open Repository.
  9. ^ Birkmann, Joern (editor). 2006. Measuring Vulnerability to Natural Hazards – Towards Disaster Resilient Societies. UNU Press.
  10. ^ Wolters, Michel L.; Kuenzer, Claudia (2015). "Vulnerability Assessments of Coastal River Deltas – Categorization and Review". Journal of Coastal Conservation. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 19 (3): 345–368. doi:10.1007/s11852-015-0396-6. ISSN 1400-0350. S2CID 127950375.
  11. ^ Luis Flores Ballesteros. "What determines a disaster?" 54 Pesos May. 2008:54 Pesos 11 Sep 2008. http://54pesos.org/2008/09/11/what-determines-a-disaster/ 2012-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ See also Daniel R. Curtis, "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"
  13. ^ Turner, Heather A.; Turner, R. Jay (December 1999). "Gender, Social Status, and Emotional Reliance". Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 40 (4): 360–373. doi:10.2307/2676331. JSTOR 2676331. PMID 10643161.
  14. ^ Prowse, Martin (2003), Towards a clearer understanding of 'vulnerability' in relation to chronic poverty (PDF), Manchester: Chronic Poverty Research Centre, ISBN 1-904049-23-0, OCLC 53854016
  15. ^ Pelling, Mark (2003). The Vulnerability of Cities: Natural Disasters and Social Resilience. Earthscan Publications LTD. ISBN 1-85383-830-6.
  16. ^ Wells, Linton (2017). "Cognitive-Emotional Conflict: Adversary Will and Social Resilience". PRISM. 7 (2): 4–17. ISSN 2157-0663. JSTOR 26470514.
  17. ^ a b Riskind, John H.; Black, David (2005). "Cognitive Vulnerability". In Freeman, Arthur; Felgoise, Stephanie H.; et al. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Cognitive Behavior Therapy. New York: Springer. pp. 122–26. ISBN 9781429411738.
  18. ^ Jeronimus B.F.; Kotov, R.; Riese, H.; Ormel, J. (2016). "Neuroticism's prospective association with mental disorders halves after adjustment for baseline symptoms and psychiatric history, but the adjusted association hardly decays with time: a meta-analysis on 59 longitudinal/prospective studies with 443 313 participants". Psychological Medicine. 46 (14): 2883–2906. doi:10.1017/S0033291716001653. PMID 27523506. S2CID 23548727.
  19. ^ Ingram, Rick (February 2003). "Origins of Cognitive Vulnerability to Depression" (PDF). Cognitive Therapy and Research. 27 (1): 77–88. doi:10.1023/a:1022590730752. ISSN 0147-5916. S2CID 16148365.
  20. ^ Lawton, M. Powell (1980). "Psychological Vulnerability". IRB: Ethics & Human Research. 2 (8): 5–7. ISSN 0193-7758. JSTOR 3563995.
  21. ^ "Time course of attentional bias for threat information in non-clinical anxiety". Behaviour Research and Therapy. 35.
  22. ^ Mathews, Andrew; MacLeod, Colin (1 April 2005). "Cognitive Vulnerability to Emotional Disorders". Annual Review of Clinical Psychology. 1 (1): 167–195. doi:10.1146/annurev.clinpsy.1.102803.143916. PMID 17716086.
  23. ^ a b c IPCC, 2022: Summary for Policymakers 2023-01-22 at the Wayback Machine [H.-O. Pörtner, D.C. Roberts, E.S. Poloczanska, K. Mintenbeck, M. Tignor, A. Alegría, M. Craig, S. Langsdorf, S. Löschke, V. Möller, A. Okem (eds.)]. In: Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2022-03-18 at the Wayback Machine [H.-O. Pörtner, D.C. Roberts, M. Tignor, E.S. Poloczanska, K. Mintenbeck, A. Alegría, M. Craig, S. Langsdorf, S. Löschke, V. Möller, A. Okem, B. Rama (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, USA, pp. 3–33, doi:10.1017/9781009325844.001.
  24. ^ Brown, Brene (2019). Braving the Wilderness: the Quest for True Belonging and the Courage to Stand Alone. Sounds True. p. 154.
  25. ^ Brown, Brene (2012). The power of vulnerability. Sounds True.
  26. ^ Thompson, Ross A. (1991). "Emotional Regulation and Emotional Development". Educational Psychology Review. 3 (4): 269–307. doi:10.1007/bf01319934. ISSN 1040-726X. JSTOR 23359228. S2CID 3560960.
  27. ^ Bray, Margaret V. du; Wutich, Amber; Brewis, Alexandra (2017-04-01). "Hope and Worry: Gendered Emotional Geographies of Climate Change in Three Vulnerable U.S. Communities". Weather, Climate, and Society. 9 (2): 285–297. Bibcode:2017WCS.....9..285D. doi:10.1175/WCAS-D-16-0077.1. ISSN 1948-8327.
  28. ^ Charles, Susan T.; Luong, Gloria (2013). "Emotional Experience Across Adulthood: The Theoretical Model of Strength and Vulnerability Integration". Current Directions in Psychological Science. 22 (6): 443–448. doi:10.1177/0963721413497013. ISSN 0963-7214. JSTOR 44318703. S2CID 145454712.
  29. ^ Kieft, Jasmine and Bendell, Jem (2021) The responsibility of communicating difficult truths about climate influenced societal disruption and collapse: an introduction to psychological research. Institute for Leadership and Sustainability (IFLAS) Occasional Papers Volume 7. University of Cumbria, Ambleside, UK..(Unpublished)
  30. ^ Ball, Robert (2003). The Fundamentals of Aircraft Combat Survivability Analysis and Design, 2nd Edition. AIAA Education Series. p. 603. ISBN 978-1-56347-582-5.
  31. ^ Carlo, Kopp (5 July 2005). "Warship Vulnerability". ausairpower.net: 1.
  32. ^ "A Matter of Development: How to Reduce Vulnerability in the Face of Natural Disasters | Publications" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  33. ^ McCoy, Jennifer. "The Vulnerabilities of Democracy". The Carter Center.
  34. ^ "6 in 10 Americans say US democracy is in crisis as the 'Big Lie' takes root". NPR.
  35. ^ Gabriel, Trip (21 February 2022). "The Senate's Most Vulnerable Democrats". The New York Times.
  36. ^ Madigan, Michael L (2017). Handbook of Emergency Management Concepts: A Step-by-Step Approach. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1351337472.
  37. ^ William Godwin (1876). "Lives of the Necromancers". p. 17.
  38. ^ Lapsley, Daniel K.; Hill, Patrick L. (April 16, 2009). "Subjective invulnerability, optimism bias and adjustment in emerging adulthood". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 39 (8): 847–857. doi:10.1007/s10964-009-9409-9. S2CID 18161557. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  39. ^ Hill, Patrick L.; Duggan, Peter M.; Lapsley, Daniel K. (February 24, 2011). "Subjective Invulnerability, Risk Behavior, and Adjustment in Early Adolescence". The Journal of Early Adolescence. 32 (4): 489–501. doi:10.1177/0272431611400304. S2CID 145688280. Retrieved March 27, 2023.

External links edit

  • Community based vulnerability mapping in Búzi, Mozambique (GIS and Remote Sensing)
  • MunichRe Foundation
  • Satellite Vulnerability
  • Survivability/Lethality Analysis – US Army
  • RESIST RESIST Vulnerability Assessment Code
  • Top Computer Vulnerabilities
  • United Nations University Institute of Environment and Human Security
  • VULNERABILITY LABORATORY (Verified Vulnerability Research Project)
  • Vulners vulnerability database with API

vulnerability, vulnerabilities, computing, field, cyber, space, such, security, holes, computing, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources. For vulnerabilities in the computing field and cyber space such as security holes see Vulnerability computing For other uses see Vulnerability disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Vulnerability news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vulnerability refers to the quality or state of being exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed either physically or emotionally 1 A window of vulnerability WOV is a time frame within which defensive measures are diminished compromised or lacking 2 The understanding of social and environmental vulnerability as a methodological approach involves the analysis of the risks and assets of disadvantaged groups such as the elderly The approach of vulnerability in itself brings great expectations of social policy and gerontological planning 3 4 Types of vulnerability include social cognitive environmental emotional or military In relation to hazards and disasters vulnerability is a concept that links the relationship that people have with their environment to social forces and institutions and the cultural values that sustain and contest them The concept of vulnerability expresses the multi dimensionality of disasters by focusing attention on the totality of relationships in a given social situation which constitute a condition that in combination with environmental forces produces a disaster 5 It is also the extent to which changes could harm a system or to which the community can be affected by the impact of a hazard or exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed either physically or emotionally Within the body of literature related to vulnerability one major research stream includes the methodology behind said research namely measuring and assessing indicators of vulnerability These include external sudden shocks and continued stresses and internal indicators such as defenselessness or inability to cope with incapacities 6 Vulnerability research covers a complex multidisciplinary field including development and poverty studies public health climate studies studies engineering geography political ecology and disaster risk management 7 This research is of importance and interest for organizations trying to reduce vulnerability 8 especially as related to poverty and other Millennium Development Goals Many institutions are conducting interdisciplinary research on vulnerability A forum that brings many of the current researchers on vulnerability together is the Expert Working Group EWG Researchers are currently working to refine definitions of vulnerability measurement and assessment methods and effective communication of research to decision makers 9 10 Contents 1 Types 1 1 Social 1 2 Cognitive 1 3 Environmental or climate change 1 4 Emotional 1 5 Military 1 6 Political 2 Invulnerability 2 1 Invulnerability in Adolescents 2 2 Invulnerability in Emerging Adults 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksTypes editSocial edit Main article Social vulnerability Social vulnerability is one dimension of vulnerability that responds to multiple stressors agent responsible for stress 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 11 12 It was also found that marital status employment and income have an impact on the level of vulnerability presented in individuals 13 In this respect there is a need to place an increased emphasis on assets and entitlements for understanding catastrophe as opposed to solely the strength or severity of shocks 14 The capacity of individuals communities and systems to survive adapt transform and grow in the face of stress and shocks increase when conditions require it 15 Building resilience is about making people communities and systems better prepared to withstand catastrophic events both natural and man made and able to bounce back more quickly and emerge stronger from these shocks and stresses 16 Cognitive edit Main article Cognitive vulnerability A cognitive vulnerability in cognitive psychology is an erroneous belief cognitive bias or pattern of thought that is believed to predispose the individual to psychological problems 17 Cognitive vulnerability is in place before the symptoms of psychological disorders start to appear such as high neuroticism 18 After the individual encounters a stressful experience the cognitive vulnerability shapes a maladaptive response that may lead to a psychological disorder 17 In psychopathology cognitive vulnerability is constructed from schema models hopelessness models and attachment theory 19 The attachment theory states that humans need to develop a close bond with their caregivers When there is a disruption in the child parent bonding relationship it may be associated with cognitive vulnerability and depression 20 Attentional bias is a form of cognitive bias that can lead to cognitive vulnerability Allocating a danger level to a threat depends on the urgency or intensity of the threshold 21 Anxiety is not associated with selective orientation 22 Environmental or climate change edit This section is an excerpt from Climate change vulnerability edit Climate change vulnerability or climate vulnerability or climate risk vulnerability is a concept that describes how strongly people or ecosystems are likely to be affected by climate change It is defined as the propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected by climate change It can apply to humans and also to natural systems or ecosystems 23 12 Related concepts include climate sensitivity and the ability or lack thereof to cope and adapt 23 5 Vulnerability is a component of climate risk Vulnerability differs within communities and across societies regions and countries and can increase or decrease over time 23 12 Emotional edit Brene Brown defines vulnerability as uncertainty risk and emotional exposure Brown goes on to suggest that vulnerability is our most accurate measure of courage we allow ourselves to be seen when we are vulnerable 24 Brene Brown teaches her followers that vulnerability is typically thought of as the center of emotions such as grief shame fear and disappointment but it is also the center and birthplace of love belonging authenticity creativity courage and accountability 25 Selective reinforcement and modeling has been used to help children learn from a young age how to regulate and take accountability for their emotions Unpleasant emotional states are managed by their subjective discomfort 26 Emotional vulnerability is also impacted by respondents that express feelings of sadness about the uncertainty of climate change 27 Increasing awareness and impact leads to heightened emotional responses Along with this emotional vulnerability can affect the physical well being of older adults when they suppress their emotions in highly distressing situations 28 When these vulnerabilities are supported through conversation with an emotionally safe other this vulnerability can lead to resilience and the capacity to support others 29 Military edit See also Paul Nitze In military terminology vulnerability is a subset of survivability the others being susceptibility and recoverability Vulnerability is defined in various ways depending on the nation and service arm concerned but in general it refers to the near instantaneous effects of a weapon attack In aviation it is defined as the inability of an aircraft to withstand the damage caused by the man made hostile environment 30 In some definitions recoverability damage control firefighting restoration of capability is included in vulnerability Some military services develop their own concept of vulnerability 31 Political edit Political vulnerability can be understood as the weakness of the democratic system with its negative effects on the efficiency of public policies the legitimacy of the government action limited participation of citizens and the private sector in national efforts linkage with local governments and civil organizations the handling and management of emergencies processing of citizen s demands and needs and the capacity to meet them 32 Democratic backsliding is a direct result of political vulnerability and has been documented across the globe throughout history 33 34 Political vulnerability can also refer to elected officials or political candidates chances of election with municipal and local elections often signifying a shift one way or the other on a national scale 35 Invulnerability editInvulnerability is a common feature found in science fiction and fantasy particularly in superhero fiction as depicted in novels comic books and video games In such stories it is a quality that makes a character impervious to pain damage or loss of health There are many levels of invulnerability just like there are many level of immortality the highest level is absolute immortality Many superheroes in comic books have invulnerability but it is often superhuman invulnerability aka Strength Based Invulnerability It means that these superheroes develop a form of relative invulnerability the user becoming impossible to harm by beings or forces less powerful than themselves They are immune to most kinds of attacks but they can still be hurt or even killed by stronger characters In video games it can be found in the form of power ups or cheats when activated via cheats it is often referred to as god mode Generally it does not protect the player from certain instant death hazards most notably bottomless pits from which even if the player were to survive the fall they would be unable to escape As a rule invulnerability granted by power ups is temporary and wears off after a set amount of time while invulnerability cheats once activated remain in effect until deactivated or the end of the level is reached Depending on the game in question invulnerability to damage may or may not protect the player from non damage effects such as being immobilized or sent flying 36 In mythology talismans charms and amulets were created by magic users for the purpose of making the wearer immune to injury from both mystic and mundane weapons 37 Invulnerability in Adolescents edit Hill Duggan and Lapsley state in their article that it is commonly accepted that teenagers have no regard for physical danger which might indicate that they have a sense of danger invulnerability Additionally they predicted that the teenagers might have a sense of psychological invulnerability or a sense of being able to remain unaffected by negative thoughts and emotions In order to test the effects of both types of invulnerability the researchers used the Adolescent Invulnerability Scale created by Lapsley and Hill in 2010 which includes twenty statements assessing to what extent the adolescents felt invulnerable psychologically and in danger situations 38 Hill et al found that having a sense of psychological invulnerability benefitted adolescents in combatting negative emotions such as depression Adolescents who rated themselves as more psychologically invulnerable demonstrated more effective coping mechanisms during times of stress or depression This lead the researchers to believe that psychological invulnerability during adolescence is beneficial for identity formation Danger invulnerability highly correlated with illegal or criminal activity but had no correlation with mental health However danger invulnerability was able to effectively predict delinquency lifetime drug use and drug use frequency Gender differences in the data showed that adolescent males were more likely to feel invulnerable to danger and psychological effects The researchers did not observe any difference between the ages of participants 39 Invulnerability in Emerging Adults edit In this study Lapsley and Hill 2010 created the AIS for the purpose of studying the invulnerability of college students in Barnett s emerging adulthood hyperlink stage of life Researchers predicted a positive correlation between the adolescents and emerging adults scores and subsequently found said correlation They observed no significant differences in negative and positive optimism biases which were other elements of the same study But as predicted male participants scored higher on both areas of invulnerability High danger invulnerability strongly correlated with social issues such as risk behavior and substance use Both types of invulnerability psychological and danger invulnerability proved to be high predictors of self esteem problems in emerging adulthood See also editCourage Gullibility Emotional insecurity Exploitation of labour Representativeness heuristic True self and false self Vulnerabilities exploited by manipulators Vulnerability and care theory of love Vulnerability in computing Vulnerability index Vulnerable adultReferences edit VULNERABILITY English Definition and Meaning Lexico Dictionaries English Archived from the original on January 18 2021 Retrieved 2022 03 07 KBpedia Vulnerability Reference Concept KBpedia Retrieved 2019 11 21 Sanchez Gonzalez D Egea Jimenez C 2011 Social Vulnerability approach to investigate the social and environmental disadvantages Its application in the study of elderly people Pap Poblac 17 69 151 185 Sanchez Gonzalez D 2015 Physical social environments and aging population from environmental gerontology and geography Socio spatial implications in Latin America Revista de Geografia Norte Grande 60 60 97 114 doi 10 4067 S0718 34022015000100006 Bankoff Greg et al 2004 Mapping Vulnerability Disasters Development and People London Earth scan Villa gran Juan Carlos Vulnerability A conceptual and methodological review SOURCE No 2 2006 Bonn Germany Rumpf Clemens M Lewis Hugh G Atkinson Peter M 2017 03 27 Population vulnerability models for asteroid impact risk assessment Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 52 6 1082 1102 arXiv 1702 05798 Bibcode 2017M amp PS 52 1082R doi 10 1111 maps 12861 ISSN 1086 9379 S2CID 49320450 Promotion of Roma s access to Education Social Impact WORKALo The creation of new occupational patterns for cultural minorities the Gypsy Case 2001 2004 Framework Programme 5 FP5 SIOR Social Impact Open Repository Birkmann Joern editor 2006 Measuring Vulnerability to Natural Hazards Towards Disaster Resilient Societies UNU Press Wolters Michel L Kuenzer Claudia 2015 Vulnerability Assessments of Coastal River Deltas Categorization and Review Journal of Coastal Conservation Springer Science and Business Media LLC 19 3 345 368 doi 10 1007 s11852 015 0396 6 ISSN 1400 0350 S2CID 127950375 Luis Flores Ballesteros What determines a disaster 54 Pesos May 2008 54 Pesos 11 Sep 2008 http 54pesos org 2008 09 11 what determines a disaster Archived 2012 03 20 at the Wayback Machine See also Daniel R Curtis 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 Turner Heather A Turner R Jay December 1999 Gender Social Status and Emotional Reliance Journal of Health and Social Behavior 40 4 360 373 doi 10 2307 2676331 JSTOR 2676331 PMID 10643161 Prowse Martin 2003 Towards a clearer understanding of vulnerability in relation to chronic poverty PDF Manchester Chronic Poverty Research Centre ISBN 1 904049 23 0 OCLC 53854016 Pelling Mark 2003 The Vulnerability of Cities Natural Disasters and Social Resilience Earthscan Publications LTD ISBN 1 85383 830 6 Wells Linton 2017 Cognitive Emotional Conflict Adversary Will and Social Resilience PRISM 7 2 4 17 ISSN 2157 0663 JSTOR 26470514 a b Riskind John H Black David 2005 Cognitive Vulnerability In Freeman Arthur Felgoise Stephanie H et al eds Encyclopedia of Cognitive Behavior Therapy New York Springer pp 122 26 ISBN 9781429411738 Jeronimus B F Kotov R Riese H Ormel J 2016 Neuroticism s prospective association with mental disorders halves after adjustment for baseline symptoms and psychiatric history but the adjusted association hardly decays with time a meta analysis on 59 longitudinal prospective studies with 443 313 participants Psychological Medicine 46 14 2883 2906 doi 10 1017 S0033291716001653 PMID 27523506 S2CID 23548727 Ingram Rick February 2003 Origins of Cognitive Vulnerability to Depression PDF Cognitive Therapy and Research 27 1 77 88 doi 10 1023 a 1022590730752 ISSN 0147 5916 S2CID 16148365 Lawton M Powell 1980 Psychological Vulnerability IRB Ethics amp Human Research 2 8 5 7 ISSN 0193 7758 JSTOR 3563995 Time course of attentional bias for threat information in non clinical anxiety Behaviour Research and Therapy 35 Mathews Andrew MacLeod Colin 1 April 2005 Cognitive Vulnerability to Emotional Disorders Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 1 1 167 195 doi 10 1146 annurev clinpsy 1 102803 143916 PMID 17716086 a b c IPCC 2022 Summary for Policymakers Archived 2023 01 22 at the Wayback Machine H O Portner D C Roberts E S Poloczanska K Mintenbeck M Tignor A Alegria M Craig S Langsdorf S Loschke V Moller A Okem eds In Climate Change 2022 Impacts Adaptation and Vulnerability Contribution of Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Archived 2022 03 18 at the Wayback Machine H O Portner D C Roberts M Tignor E S Poloczanska K Mintenbeck A Alegria M Craig S Langsdorf S Loschke V Moller A Okem B Rama eds Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK and New York NY USA pp 3 33 doi 10 1017 9781009325844 001 Brown Brene 2019 Braving the Wilderness the Quest for True Belonging and the Courage to Stand Alone Sounds True p 154 Brown Brene 2012 The power of vulnerability Sounds True Thompson Ross A 1991 Emotional Regulation and Emotional Development Educational Psychology Review 3 4 269 307 doi 10 1007 bf01319934 ISSN 1040 726X JSTOR 23359228 S2CID 3560960 Bray Margaret V du Wutich Amber Brewis Alexandra 2017 04 01 Hope and Worry Gendered Emotional Geographies of Climate Change in Three Vulnerable U S Communities Weather Climate and Society 9 2 285 297 Bibcode 2017WCS 9 285D doi 10 1175 WCAS D 16 0077 1 ISSN 1948 8327 Charles Susan T Luong Gloria 2013 Emotional Experience Across Adulthood The Theoretical Model of Strength and Vulnerability Integration Current Directions in Psychological Science 22 6 443 448 doi 10 1177 0963721413497013 ISSN 0963 7214 JSTOR 44318703 S2CID 145454712 Kieft Jasmine and Bendell Jem 2021 The responsibility of communicating difficult truths about climate influenced societal disruption and collapse an introduction to psychological research Institute for Leadership and Sustainability IFLAS Occasional Papers Volume 7 University of Cumbria Ambleside UK Unpublished Ball Robert 2003 The Fundamentals of Aircraft Combat Survivability Analysis and Design 2nd Edition AIAA Education Series p 603 ISBN 978 1 56347 582 5 Carlo Kopp 5 July 2005 Warship Vulnerability ausairpower net 1 A Matter of Development How to Reduce Vulnerability in the Face of Natural Disasters Publications PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help McCoy Jennifer The Vulnerabilities of Democracy The Carter Center 6 in 10 Americans say US democracy is in crisis as the Big Lie takes root NPR Gabriel Trip 21 February 2022 The Senate s Most Vulnerable Democrats The New York Times Madigan Michael L 2017 Handbook of Emergency Management Concepts A Step by Step Approach CRC Press ISBN 978 1351337472 William Godwin 1876 Lives of the Necromancers p 17 Lapsley Daniel K Hill Patrick L April 16 2009 Subjective invulnerability optimism bias and adjustment in emerging adulthood Journal of Youth and Adolescence 39 8 847 857 doi 10 1007 s10964 009 9409 9 S2CID 18161557 Retrieved March 27 2023 Hill Patrick L Duggan Peter M Lapsley Daniel K February 24 2011 Subjective Invulnerability Risk Behavior and Adjustment in Early Adolescence The Journal of Early Adolescence 32 4 489 501 doi 10 1177 0272431611400304 S2CID 145688280 Retrieved March 27 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Vulnerability nbsp Look up vulnerability in Wiktionary the free dictionary Community based vulnerability mapping in Buzi Mozambique GIS and Remote Sensing MunichRe Foundation Satellite Vulnerability Survivability Lethality Analysis US Army RESIST RESIST Vulnerability Assessment Code Top Computer Vulnerabilities United Nations University Institute of Environment and Human Security VULNERABILITY LABORATORY Verified Vulnerability Research Project Vulners vulnerability database with API Retrieved from https en 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