Improving community disaster resilience through scorecard self-testing
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop government and community-level critical thinking, planning, and action for improving community disaster resilience by reporting a study that sought to evaluate the possibility of using the Torrens Resilience Institute Australian Community Disaster...
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Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English English English |
Published: |
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://irep.iium.edu.my/47744/1/47744_Improving%20community.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/47744/7/47744-Improving%20community%20disaster%20resilience%20through%20scorecard%20self-testing_SCOPUS.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/47744/8/47744-Improving%20community%20disaster%20resilience%20through%20scorecard%20self-testing_WOS.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/47744/ http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journal/dpm |
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Summary: | Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop government and community-level critical thinking,
planning, and action for improving community disaster resilience by reporting a study that sought to
evaluate the possibility of using the Torrens Resilience Institute Australian Community Disaster Resilience
(CDR) Scorecard in the Malaysian context.
Design/methodology/approach – A participatory action research approach (done in 2015) encouraged key
people involved in managing the 2014 Kelantan floods in Malaysia’s north-east to participate in discussions
about, and self-testing of, the CDR Scorecard to measure and improve their communities’ disaster resilience.
Findings – The CDR Scorecard can be useful in the Malaysian community context, with some modifications.
Self-testing revealed that participating communities need to strengthen their disaster resilience through
better communication, cross-community cooperation, maximizing opportunities to compare their plans,
actions and reactions with those reported in research publications, and aligning their community disaster
management with reported best practice internationally while acknowledging the need to adapt such practice
to local contexts.
Research limitations/implications – There is a need for a Malaysia-wide, simple-to-use, standardized
disaster resilience scorecard to improve communities’ quality, self-efficacy, and capability to facilitate
improved disaster resilience.
Practical implications – The adaptation of Australian CDR Scorecard for used in the country.
Social implications – Awareness of CDR level will enhance community and government preparedness,
mitigation, and responses to flood disaster.
Originality/value – This project is the first of its kind in Malaysia. It provides an example of the
possibilities of using the CDR Scorecard globally in the form of a context-specific toolkit. The engagement of
key people in the community in self-testing the Scorecard provides genuine, on-the-ground, real life data,
giving others an understanding of local assessment of each community’s resilience level. |
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