Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat

abstract: Urban heat is a growing problem that impacts public health, water and energy use, and the economy and affects population subgroups differently. Exposure and sensitivity, two key factors in determining vulnerability, have been widely researched. This dissertation focuses on the adaptive cap...

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Other Authors: Guardaro, Melissa Mitten (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55662
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-556622020-01-15T03:01:14Z Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat abstract: Urban heat is a growing problem that impacts public health, water and energy use, and the economy and affects population subgroups differently. Exposure and sensitivity, two key factors in determining vulnerability, have been widely researched. This dissertation focuses on the adaptive capacity component of heat vulnerability at the individual, household, and community scale. Using a mixed methods approach and metropolitan Phoenix as a test site, I explored how vulnerable communities understand and adapt to increasing extreme urban heat to uncover adaptive capacity that is not being operationalized well through current heat vulnerability frameworks. Twenty-three open-ended interviews were conducted where residents were encouraged to tell their stories about past and present extreme heat adaptive capacity behaviors. A community-based participatory research project consisting of three workshops and demonstration projects was piloted in three underserved neighborhoods to address urban heat on a local scale and collaboratively create community heat action plans. Last, a practitioner stakeholder meeting was held to discuss how the heat action plans will be integrated into other community efforts. Using data from the interviews, workshops, and stakeholder meeting, social capital was examined in the context of urban heat. Although social capital has been measured in a multitude of ways to gauge social relationships, trust, and reciprocity within a community, it is situational and reflects a position within the formal and informal aspects of any issue. Three narratives emerged from the interviews illuminating differentiated capacities to cope with urban heat: heat is an inconvenience, heat is a manageable problem, and heat is a catastrophe. For each of these narratives, generic adaptive capacity is impacted differently by specific heat adaptive capacity. The heat action plan workshops generated hyper-local heat solutions that reflected the neighborhoods’ different identities. Community-based organizations were instrumental in the success of this program. Social capital indicators were developed specific to urban heat that rely on heavily on family and personal relationships, attitudes and beliefs, perceived support, network size and community engagement. This research highlights how extreme heat vulnerability may need to be rethought to capture adaptive capacity nuances and the dynamic structure of who is vulnerable under what circumstances. Dissertation/Thesis Guardaro, Melissa Mitten (Author) Redman, Charles L (Advisor) Hondula, David M (Committee member) Johnston, Erik W (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Climate change Sustainability Social research Adaptive Capacity Climate Change Community Engagement Social Capital Urban Heat Vulnerability eng 182 pages Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55662 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Climate change
Sustainability
Social research
Adaptive Capacity
Climate Change
Community Engagement
Social Capital
Urban Heat
Vulnerability
spellingShingle Climate change
Sustainability
Social research
Adaptive Capacity
Climate Change
Community Engagement
Social Capital
Urban Heat
Vulnerability
Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
description abstract: Urban heat is a growing problem that impacts public health, water and energy use, and the economy and affects population subgroups differently. Exposure and sensitivity, two key factors in determining vulnerability, have been widely researched. This dissertation focuses on the adaptive capacity component of heat vulnerability at the individual, household, and community scale. Using a mixed methods approach and metropolitan Phoenix as a test site, I explored how vulnerable communities understand and adapt to increasing extreme urban heat to uncover adaptive capacity that is not being operationalized well through current heat vulnerability frameworks. Twenty-three open-ended interviews were conducted where residents were encouraged to tell their stories about past and present extreme heat adaptive capacity behaviors. A community-based participatory research project consisting of three workshops and demonstration projects was piloted in three underserved neighborhoods to address urban heat on a local scale and collaboratively create community heat action plans. Last, a practitioner stakeholder meeting was held to discuss how the heat action plans will be integrated into other community efforts. Using data from the interviews, workshops, and stakeholder meeting, social capital was examined in the context of urban heat. Although social capital has been measured in a multitude of ways to gauge social relationships, trust, and reciprocity within a community, it is situational and reflects a position within the formal and informal aspects of any issue. Three narratives emerged from the interviews illuminating differentiated capacities to cope with urban heat: heat is an inconvenience, heat is a manageable problem, and heat is a catastrophe. For each of these narratives, generic adaptive capacity is impacted differently by specific heat adaptive capacity. The heat action plan workshops generated hyper-local heat solutions that reflected the neighborhoods’ different identities. Community-based organizations were instrumental in the success of this program. Social capital indicators were developed specific to urban heat that rely on heavily on family and personal relationships, attitudes and beliefs, perceived support, network size and community engagement. This research highlights how extreme heat vulnerability may need to be rethought to capture adaptive capacity nuances and the dynamic structure of who is vulnerable under what circumstances. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019
author2 Guardaro, Melissa Mitten (Author)
author_facet Guardaro, Melissa Mitten (Author)
title Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
title_short Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
title_full Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
title_fullStr Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Relationship Between Social Capital and Vulnerability to Extreme Heat
title_sort exploring the relationship between social capital and vulnerability to extreme heat
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55662
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