1. Planning for disaster resilience in rural, remote, and coastal communities: moving from thought to action.
- Author
-
Murphy BL, Anderson GS, Bowles R, and Cox RS
- Subjects
- Capacity Building, Community-Based Participatory Research organization & administration, Humans, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Organizational Case Studies, Civil Defense organization & administration, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Rural Population
- Abstract
Disaster resilience is the cornerstone of effective emergency management across all phases of a disaster from preparedness through response and recovery. To support community resilience planning in the Rural Disaster Resilience Project (RDRP) Planning Framework, a print-based version of the guide book and a suite of resilience planning tools were field tested in three communities representing different regions and geographies within Canada. The results provide a cross-case study analysis from which lessons learned can be extracted. The authors demonstrate that by encouraging resilience thinking and proactive planning even very small rural communities can harness their inherent strengths and resources to enhance their own disaster resilience, as undertaking the resilience planning process was as important as the outcomes.The resilience enhancement planning process must be flexible enough to allow each community to act independently to meet their own needs. The field sites demonstrate that any motivated group of individuals, representing a neighborhood or some larger area could undertake a resilience initiative, especially with the assistance of a bridging organization or tool such as the RDRP Planning Framework.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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