A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience

Capacity and resilience are two closely aligned concepts in human development. They both contribute to increasing the ability of societies to cope with and adapt to challenging and adverse perturbations that may affect systems the societies depend upon. A traditional approach to building capacity an...

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Main Author: Bernard Amadei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/11/2/28
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spelling doaj-31769dd425b94a4ba4c70dcad31bb1532020-11-25T03:39:17ZengMDPI AGChallenges2078-15472020-10-0111282810.3390/challe11020028A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and ResilienceBernard Amadei0Department of Civil Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0428, USACapacity and resilience are two closely aligned concepts in human development. They both contribute to increasing the ability of societies to cope with and adapt to challenging and adverse perturbations that may affect systems the societies depend upon. A traditional approach to building capacity and resilience at the community scale is to address in a fragmented manner specific issues at play in institutional, socio-economic, environmental, and infrastructure systems that may prevent the delivery of adequate community services and meeting development goals. This compartmentalized approach, driven by a need to reach some form of satisfactory community equilibrium, fails to recognize the interactions and interconnectedness that exist among community systems, which, if addressed, could solve multiple issues more effectively. It also does not account for the complex, adaptive, and dynamic nature of communities. A resilient community is more than just a collection of well-functioning silos. This paper proposes a system dynamics approach to account for the dynamic and adaptive nature of communities when developing capacity-building strategies toward strengthening their ability to deliver services and deal with adverse events. A case study of small-scale community capacity assessment around the service of wastewater and sewage treatment published elsewhere is presented to illustrate the proposed approach.https://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/11/2/28capacity buildingsystem dynamicsresiliencerecoverydevelopment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernard Amadei
spellingShingle Bernard Amadei
A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
Challenges
capacity building
system dynamics
resilience
recovery
development
author_facet Bernard Amadei
author_sort Bernard Amadei
title A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
title_short A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
title_full A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
title_fullStr A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
title_full_unstemmed A Systems Approach to Building Community Capacity and Resilience
title_sort systems approach to building community capacity and resilience
publisher MDPI AG
series Challenges
issn 2078-1547
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Capacity and resilience are two closely aligned concepts in human development. They both contribute to increasing the ability of societies to cope with and adapt to challenging and adverse perturbations that may affect systems the societies depend upon. A traditional approach to building capacity and resilience at the community scale is to address in a fragmented manner specific issues at play in institutional, socio-economic, environmental, and infrastructure systems that may prevent the delivery of adequate community services and meeting development goals. This compartmentalized approach, driven by a need to reach some form of satisfactory community equilibrium, fails to recognize the interactions and interconnectedness that exist among community systems, which, if addressed, could solve multiple issues more effectively. It also does not account for the complex, adaptive, and dynamic nature of communities. A resilient community is more than just a collection of well-functioning silos. This paper proposes a system dynamics approach to account for the dynamic and adaptive nature of communities when developing capacity-building strategies toward strengthening their ability to deliver services and deal with adverse events. A case study of small-scale community capacity assessment around the service of wastewater and sewage treatment published elsewhere is presented to illustrate the proposed approach.
topic capacity building
system dynamics
resilience
recovery
development
url https://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/11/2/28
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