كليدواژه :
Resilience , Recovery , Measurement , Indicators , Speed
چكيده فارسي :
This paper reports attempts to measure and assess resilience and recovery after various recent
earthquakes that had huge impacts in their respective countries. The examples are both quantitative and
qualitative. The concept of resilience as used in disaster literature has, until recently, been imprecise
(Bruneau et al., 2003). This papers reports the latest thinking on what the concept means and how to measure
it. It also links resilience to the speed and quality of recovery. Recovery is variously referred to as recovery,
reconstruction and long-term development. The research reported here makes no distinction between these.
Recovery may involve reinstating things to the same state they were in before the disaster or ‘building back
better’. The focus of this paper is to measure the speed of recovery with reference to a ‘base state’
immediately prior to the onset of the disaster.
We used satellite imagery and ground surveys to measure and compare the speed of recovery in
Thailand and Pakistan. People were rehoused significantly faster in Thailand than in Pakistan. We used
household surveys and key informant interviews in Pakistan to measure recovery of a range of 10 indicators,
including access, housing, education, health, administration, environment etc. Finally, we used building
control and insurance data in Northridge California to suggest that insured households got rehoused on
average 12 months faster than uninsured households. The paper concludes that it is possible to measure
speed of recovery, but queries whether speed should be the sole measure of resilience?