Disaster risk perception and vulnerability
From LINKS Community Center
This section will contain a methodology, a set of tools and guidelines, to understand how the use of virtual platforms can be integrated in disaster management processes reducing their impact on vulnerability and how practitioners and people’s trust in these tools can be implemented. (From: The first LINKS project newsletter)
The following table visualizes an example of information from the DRPV knowledge base
Vulnerability | Physical/Material | Social/Cultural | Institutional |
---|---|---|---|
Accessibility | Access to resources to be connected; physical and digital accessibility to the information/connection system | Knowledge disparities, linguistic difficulties, difficulty to access quality information | Access to representativeness into the system |
- low income people; people with disabilities; homeless people
+ |
- migrants; minorities; low income people
+ |
- migrants; refugees, homeless people; people with disabilities
+ | |
Connectivity | The level of connection (i.e. efficient system of infrastructures and services); capacity to transfer moneys, to use them | Capacity to pass information, to be connected with the others and share worries, but also connect hate | Capacity to connect people to the rescue system, facilitate communication among places and solve disruptions to infrastructures |
- remote, isolated communities
+ |
+ women; migrants; minorities; LGBTQ+ community; people with disabilities; minors | -
+ | |
!Mobility | The ability to move (also temporarily) and the availability of means of transportation, such as the capacity to use them | Mobilize ideas and networks (to increase resilience but also to feed hate and violence) | Capacity to mobilize resources, aid, rescue system |
- low income people; elderly; people with disabilities; women victim of violence
+ |
- victims of hate and discrimination
+ young people; minorities |
-
+ |