PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Evolution of vulnerability of communities facing repeated hazards.

  • Allison C Reilly,
  • Seth D Guikema,
  • Laiyin Zhu,
  • Takeru Igusa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182719
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. e0182719

Abstract

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The decisions that individuals make when recovering from and adapting to repeated hazards affect a region's vulnerability in future hazards. As such, community vulnerability is not a static property but rather a dynamic property dependent on behavioral responses to repeated hazards and damage. This paper is the first of its kind to build a framework that addresses the complex interactions between repeated hazards, regional damage, mitigation decisions, and community vulnerability. The framework enables researchers and regional planners to visualize and quantify how a community could evolve over time in response to repeated hazards under various behavioral scenarios. An illustrative example using parcel-level data from Anne Arundel County, Maryland-a county that experiences fairly frequent hurricanes-is presented to illustrate the methodology and to demonstrate how the interplay between individual choices and regional vulnerability is affected by the region's hurricane experience.