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SoResilere—A Social Resilience Index Applied to Portuguese Flood Disaster-Affected Municipalities

Author

Listed:
  • Rita Jacinto

    (Centre of Geographical Studies, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, Universidade de Lisboa, R. Branca Edmée Marques, 1600-276 Lisboa, Portugal
    Associated Laboratory Terra, R. Branca Edmée Marques, 1600-276 Lisboa, Portugal)

  • Fernando Sebastião

    (LSRE-LCM—Laboratory of Separation and Reaction Engineering-Laboratory of Catalysis and Materials, Polytechnic of Leiria, 2411-901 Leiria, Portugal
    ALiCE—Associate Laboratory in Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Rua Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465 Porto, Portugal
    School of Technology and Management, Polytechnic of Leiria, 2411-901 Leiria, Portugal)

  • Eusébio Reis

    (Centre of Geographical Studies, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, Universidade de Lisboa, R. Branca Edmée Marques, 1600-276 Lisboa, Portugal
    Associated Laboratory Terra, R. Branca Edmée Marques, 1600-276 Lisboa, Portugal)

  • João Ferrão

    (Institute of Social Sciences, Universidade de Lisboa (ICS-UL), Av. Prof. Aníbal Bettencourt 9, 1600-189 Lisboa, Portugal)

Abstract

Decades of academic discussion on social resilience have led to the development of indicators, indexes, and different approaches to assessing it at national and local levels. The need to show real-world applications of such assessments is evident since resilience became a political and disaster risk reduction governance component. This article gives a full description of the methodology used to develop SoResilere, a new social resilience index applied to flood disaster-affected Portuguese municipalities. Study cases were selected according to historical databases, academic sources and governmental entities. Statistical methods for data dimension reduction, such as Factor Analysis (through Principal Component Analysis), were applied to the quantitative data and Optimal Scaling to the categorical data. SoResilere results were analyzed. Since SoResilere is a new tool, component weighting was applied to compare results with no weighting, although it did not affect the SoResilere status in 55.5% of the study cases. There is a tendency to look at the improvement of SoResilere results with component weighting due mainly to the quantitative subindex. There is no evidence of the benefits of component weighting, as no logical association or spatial pattern was found to support SoResilere status improvement in 22.22% of the study cases.

Suggested Citation

  • Rita Jacinto & Fernando Sebastião & Eusébio Reis & João Ferrão, 2023. "SoResilere—A Social Resilience Index Applied to Portuguese Flood Disaster-Affected Municipalities," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 15(4), pages 1-43, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:15:y:2023:i:4:p:3309-:d:1065065
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    References listed on IDEAS

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