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    Social Vulnerability to Climate-Sensitive Hazards in the Southern United States

    Source: Weather, Climate, and Society:;2011:;volume( 003 ):;issue: 003::page 193
    Author:
    Emrich, Christopher T.
    ,
    Cutter, Susan L.
    DOI: 10.1175/2011WCAS1092.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: he southern United States is no stranger to hazard and disaster events. Intense hurricanes, drought, flooding, and other climate-sensitive hazards are commonplace and have outnumbered similar events in other areas of the United States annually in both scale and magnitude by a ratio of almost 4:1 during the past 10 years. While losses from climate-sensitive hazards are forecast to increase in the coming years, not all of the populations residing within these hazard zones have the same capacity to prepare for, respond to, cope with, and rebound from disaster events. The identification of these vulnerable populations and their location relative to zones of known or probably future hazard exposure is necessary for the development and implementation of effective adaptation, mitigation, and emergency management strategies. This paper provides an approach to regional assessments of hazards vulnerability by describing and integrating hazard zone information on four climate-sensitive hazards with socioeconomic and demographic data to create an index showing both the areal extent of hazard exposure and social vulnerability for the southern United States. When examined together, these maps provide an assessment of the likely spatial impacts of these climate-sensitive hazards and their variability. The identification of hotspots?counties with elevated exposures and elevated social vulnerability?highlights the distribution of the most at risk counties and the driving factors behind them. Results provide the evidentiary basis for developing targeted strategic initiatives for disaster risk reduction including preparedness for response and recovery and longer-term adaptation in those most vulnerable and highly impacted areas.
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      Social Vulnerability to Climate-Sensitive Hazards in the Southern United States

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4214187
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    contributor authorEmrich, Christopher T.
    contributor authorCutter, Susan L.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:41:11Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:41:11Z
    date copyright2011/07/01
    date issued2011
    identifier issn1948-8327
    identifier otherams-72209.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4214187
    description abstracthe southern United States is no stranger to hazard and disaster events. Intense hurricanes, drought, flooding, and other climate-sensitive hazards are commonplace and have outnumbered similar events in other areas of the United States annually in both scale and magnitude by a ratio of almost 4:1 during the past 10 years. While losses from climate-sensitive hazards are forecast to increase in the coming years, not all of the populations residing within these hazard zones have the same capacity to prepare for, respond to, cope with, and rebound from disaster events. The identification of these vulnerable populations and their location relative to zones of known or probably future hazard exposure is necessary for the development and implementation of effective adaptation, mitigation, and emergency management strategies. This paper provides an approach to regional assessments of hazards vulnerability by describing and integrating hazard zone information on four climate-sensitive hazards with socioeconomic and demographic data to create an index showing both the areal extent of hazard exposure and social vulnerability for the southern United States. When examined together, these maps provide an assessment of the likely spatial impacts of these climate-sensitive hazards and their variability. The identification of hotspots?counties with elevated exposures and elevated social vulnerability?highlights the distribution of the most at risk counties and the driving factors behind them. Results provide the evidentiary basis for developing targeted strategic initiatives for disaster risk reduction including preparedness for response and recovery and longer-term adaptation in those most vulnerable and highly impacted areas.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleSocial Vulnerability to Climate-Sensitive Hazards in the Southern United States
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume3
    journal issue3
    journal titleWeather, Climate, and Society
    identifier doi10.1175/2011WCAS1092.1
    journal fristpage193
    journal lastpage208
    treeWeather, Climate, and Society:;2011:;volume( 003 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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