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Interdisciplinary data collection for empirical community-level recovery modelling

 Interdisciplinary data collection for empirical community-level recovery modelling
Author(s): , , , ,
Presented at IABSE Symposium: Construction’s Role for a World in Emergency, Manchester, United Kingdom, 10-14 April 2024, published in , pp. 1260-1267
DOI: 10.2749/manchester.2024.1260
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The Center of Excellence for Risk-Based Community Resilience Planning (CoE) has begun to provide analyses on damage, functionality loss, recovery, etc. at the community level for a suite of possibl...
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Bibliographic Details

Author(s): (Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA Shane Crawford, Thang Dao, and Chibuike Robinson University of Alabama)
(Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA Shane Crawford, Thang Dao, and Chibuike Robinson University of Alabama)
(Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA Shane Crawford, Thang Dao, and Chibuike Robinson University of Alabama)
(Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA Shane Crawford, Thang Dao, and Chibuike Robinson University of Alabama)
(Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA Shane Crawford, Thang Dao, and Chibuike Robinson University of Alabama)
(University of Alabama)
(University of Alabama)
(University of Alabama)
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
(University of South Alabama)
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
(Oregon State University)
(Federal Emergency Management Agency)
Medium: conference paper
Language(s): English
Conference: IABSE Symposium: Construction’s Role for a World in Emergency, Manchester, United Kingdom, 10-14 April 2024
Published in:
Page(s): 1260-1267 Total no. of pages: 8
Page(s): 1260-1267
Total no. of pages: 8
DOI: 10.2749/manchester.2024.1260
Abstract:

The Center of Excellence for Risk-Based Community Resilience Planning (CoE) has begun to provide analyses on damage, functionality loss, recovery, etc. at the community level for a suite of possible hazard events via the Interdependent Networked Community Resilience Modelling Environment (IN-CORE). These analyses are instrumental to leveraging state of the art science in community decision-making; however, for this work to be as actionable as possible, the outputs must be validated for a range of implementation contexts and communities. The work presented here describes a longitudinal study of a series of communities impacted to varying degrees by a tornado outbreak in December of 2021 and the way in which this longitudinal data will be used to validate models in IN-CORE. This longitudinal study is still underway as it serves to capture recovery data for three years following the event.

Keywords:
natural hazards social vulnerability Interdisciplinary disaster research resilience modelling field study