TY - JOUR
T1 - Community Capitals Framework for Linking Buildings and Organizations for Enhancing Community Resilience through the Built Environment
AU - Daniel, Liba
AU - Mazumder, Ram K.
AU - Enderami, S. Amin
AU - Sutley, Elaina J.
AU - Lequesne, Rémy D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Society of Civil Engineers.
PY - 2021/12/8
Y1 - 2021/12/8
N2 - The goal of this paper is to define a quantitative measurement system capable of capturing multiple dimensions of a community impacted by disaster. The multiple dimensions of a community are defined here as the seven community capitals inherent to any community, namely, financial, political, social, human, cultural, natural, and built capitals. A two-pronged approach is proposed, where one prong relates organizations to community capitals using a novel scoring system aligned with the definition of each community capital, and the other prong relates building-damage consequences to the community capitals, including number of damaged buildings for built capital, household dislocation for social capital, morbidity rates for human capital, accessibility changes for political capital, and repair costs for financial capital. The framework is exemplified on a virtual community, Centerville, under an earthquake scenario. The example demonstrates that the proposed approach for quantifying capitals provides useful measures of disaster impacts and can readily inform risk-based decision making.
AB - The goal of this paper is to define a quantitative measurement system capable of capturing multiple dimensions of a community impacted by disaster. The multiple dimensions of a community are defined here as the seven community capitals inherent to any community, namely, financial, political, social, human, cultural, natural, and built capitals. A two-pronged approach is proposed, where one prong relates organizations to community capitals using a novel scoring system aligned with the definition of each community capital, and the other prong relates building-damage consequences to the community capitals, including number of damaged buildings for built capital, household dislocation for social capital, morbidity rates for human capital, accessibility changes for political capital, and repair costs for financial capital. The framework is exemplified on a virtual community, Centerville, under an earthquake scenario. The example demonstrates that the proposed approach for quantifying capitals provides useful measures of disaster impacts and can readily inform risk-based decision making.
KW - Accessibility
KW - Centerville
KW - Community capitals
KW - Community resilience
KW - Social capital
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85120993798
UR - https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/%28ASCE%29IS.1943-555X.0000668
U2 - 10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000668
DO - 10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000668
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85120993798
SN - 1076-0342
VL - 28
JO - Journal of Infrastructure Systems
JF - Journal of Infrastructure Systems
IS - 1
M1 - 04021053
ER -