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Critical review of urban community resilience indicators

Robert Osei-Kyei (School of Engineering Design and Built Environment, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia)
Vivian Tam (School of Engineering Design and Built Environment, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia)
Ursa Komac (School of Engineering Design and Built Environment, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia)
Godslove Ampratwum (School of Engineering Design and Built Environment, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia)

Smart and Sustainable Built Environment

ISSN: 2046-6099

Article publication date: 28 February 2023

Issue publication date: 22 November 2024

495

Abstract

Purpose

Urban communities can be faced with many destructive events that can disrupt the daily functioning of activities and livelihood of people living in the communities. In this regard, during the last couple of years, many governments have put a lot of efforts into building resilient urban communities. Essentially, a resilient urban community has the capacity to anticipate future disasters, prepare for and recover timely from adverse effects of disasters and unexpected circumstances. Considering this, it is therefore important for the need to continuously review the existing urban community resilience indicators, in order to identify emerging ones to enable comprehensive evaluation of urban communities in the future against unexpected events. This study therefore aims to conduct a systematic review to develop and critically analyse the emerging and leading urban community resilience indicators.

Design/methodology/approach

Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRSIMA) protocol, 53 journal articles were selected using Scopus. The selected papers were subjected to thorough content analysis.

Findings

From the review, 45 urban community resilience indicators were identified. These indicators were grouped into eight broad categories namely, Socio-demographic, Economic, Institutional Resilience, Infrastructure and Housing Resilience, Collaboration, Community Capital, Risk Data Accumulation and Geographical and Spatial characteristics of community. Further, the results indicated that the U.S had the highest number of publications, followed by Australia, China, New Zealand and Taiwan. In fact, very few studies emanated from developing economies.

Originality/value

The outputs of this study will inform policymakers, practitioners and researchers on the new and emerging indicators that should be considered when evaluating the resilience level of urban communities. The findings will also serve as a theoretical foundation for further detailed empirical investigation.

Keywords

Citation

Osei-Kyei, R., Tam, V., Komac, U. and Ampratwum, G. (2024), "Critical review of urban community resilience indicators", Smart and Sustainable Built Environment, Vol. 13 No. 6, pp. 1511-1537. https://doi.org/10.1108/SASBE-08-2022-0180

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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