000011887 001__ 11887
000011887 005__ 20141205155956.0
000011887 04107 $$aeng
000011887 046__ $$k2008-10-12
000011887 100__ $$aTierney, Kathleen
000011887 24500 $$aStructure and Process in the Study of Disaster Resilience

000011887 24630 $$n14.$$pProceedings of the 14th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering
000011887 260__ $$b
000011887 506__ $$arestricted
000011887 520__ $$2eng$$aWhile the concept of disaster resilience has become increasingly prominent in disaster loss-reduction research and practice, the concept remains undertheorized. This paper, which employs insights from a variety of social science fields, expands upon the 4-R/TOSE framework developed by investigators from the Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, focusing on structural factors and on processes, activities and practices that promote resilience. Diversity, decentralization, network forms of organization, and social capital constitute structural contributors to resilience. Reduction of production pressures, collective sensemaking and distributed cognition, and improvisation, are processes-related factors that enhance resilience.

000011887 540__ $$aText je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.
000011887 653__ $$adisaster resilience, resilience measures, disaster response, disaster recovery

000011887 7112_ $$a14th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering$$cBejing (CN)$$d2008-10-12 / 2008-10-17$$gWCEE15
000011887 720__ $$aTierney, Kathleen
000011887 8560_ $$ffischerc@itam.cas.cz
000011887 8564_ $$s65713$$uhttps://invenio.itam.cas.cz/record/11887/files/K010.pdf$$yOriginal version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, Paper ID: K010.
000011887 962__ $$r9324
000011887 980__ $$aPAPER