Community resilience across Australia towards natural hazards: an application of the Conjoint Community Resiliency Assessment Measurement

Author:

Zander Kerstin K.1,Sibarani Rifka2,Abunyewah Matthew3,Erdiaw‐Kwasie Michael Odei4,Moss Simon A.5,Lassa Jonatan4,Garnett Stephen T.6

Affiliation:

1. Associate Professor at the Northern Institute Charles Darwin University Australia

2. PhD student at the Northern Institute Charles Darwin University Australia

3. Outstanding Future Researcher at the Australasian Centre for Resilience Implementation for Sustainable Communities Charles Darwin University Australia

4. Senior Lecturer at the Northern Institute Charles Darwin University Australia

5. Dean of Graduate Research at the Research and Innovation Division University of Wollongong Australia

6. Professor at the Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Australia

Abstract

Natural hazards can turn into disasters when not managed well. An important part of disaster risk reduction is to understand how well communities are prepared for natural hazards and how well they can cope with and recover from shocks in the long term. This research assesses self‐reported community resilience and asks what makes a community resilient, using Australia as a case study. It reports on an Australian‐wide online survey which included questions related to the Conjoint Community Resiliency Assessment Measurement, a subjective indicator, as well as questions about risk perception, well‐being, and self‐efficacy. Community resilience was found to be moderately high but scores for community leadership and preparedness were low. Perceived community resilience was positively correlated with age and those with high scores for self‐efficacy and well‐being. There was, as expected, an inverse relationship between reliance on external support during natural hazards and self‐efficacy. The results complement previous studies which used different measures of community resilience.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Social Sciences

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