Review of current approaches to spatially explicit urban vulnerability assessments: hazard complexity, data sources, and cartographic representations

IF 0.7 Q3 GEOGRAPHY GeoScape Pub Date : 2020-06-01 DOI:10.2478/geosc-2020-0005
P. Raška, M. Dolejš, J. Pacina, J. Popelka, J. Píša, K. Rybová
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Abstract Socio-ecological hazards are processes that − depending on the vulnerability of societal systems − may have profound adverse impacts. For this reason, the current discourse in disaster risk reduction (DRR) has been experiencing a shift toward a vulnerability-led paradigm, raising new questions about how to address (i) the complexity of vulnerabilities to multiple hazards, (ii) their cultural, dynamic, and subjective character, and (iii) the effectiveness and legitimacy of vulnerability assessments as decision-support tools. In this paper, we present a review of 707 vulnerability studies (derived from the Clarivate WoS database; 1988−2018) with a particular focus on urban settings and spatially explicit assessments in order to evaluate current efforts to meet the aforementioned issues. The reviewed studies assessed vulnerabilities to 35 hazard types that were predominantly (n=603, 85%) analysed as single hazards (mostly seismic, flood, and groundwater contamination hazards, as well as climate change), whereas only 15% (n=104) of studies focused on multiple hazards (mostly atmospheric hazards). Within the spatially explicit vulnerability studies, almost 60% used data collected by the study itself (mostly seismic hazards), while statistical and combined data were both employed in 20% of cases (mostly floods, climate change, and social and political hazards). Statistical data were found to have only limited transferability, often being generalised to be applicable in small-scale studies, while reducing the role of cultural and contextual factors. Field research data provided high-resolution information, but their acquisition is time-consuming, and therefore fixed at a local scale and single temporal stage. Underlying hazard types and suitable data sources resulting in other differences found a preference towards the specific coverage and resolution of vulnerability maps that appeared in 44% of all reviewed studies. Altogether, the differences we found indicated a division of spatially explicit vulnerability research in two major directions: (i) geological and geomorphological studies focusing on physical vulnerability, using their own data surveys at a detailed scale and lacking links to other hazards, and (ii) other studies (mostly atmospheric hazards and socialpolitical hazards) focusing on social or combined vulnerabilities, using primarily statistical or combined data at a municipal, regional, and country scale with occasional efforts to integrate multiple hazards. Finally, although cartographic representations have become a frequent component of vulnerability studies, our review found only vague rationalisations for the presentation of maps, and a lack of guidelines for the interpretation of uncertainties and the use of maps as decision-support tools.
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回顾当前空间明确的城市脆弱性评估方法:危害复杂性、数据来源和地图表示
摘要社会生态危害是指根据社会系统的脆弱性可能产生深远不利影响的过程。因此,当前减少灾害风险的讨论正朝着以脆弱性为主导的范式转变,这引发了关于如何解决以下问题的新问题:(i)易受多种灾害影响的脆弱性的复杂性,(ii)其文化、动态和主观特征,以及(iii)脆弱性评估作为决策支持工具的有效性和合法性。在本文中,我们回顾了707项脆弱性研究(来源于Clarivate WoS数据库;1988−2018),特别关注城市环境和空间明确的评估,以评估当前解决上述问题的努力。受审查的研究评估了35种危害类型的脆弱性,这些危害类型主要(n=603,85%)被分析为单一危害(主要是地震、洪水和地下水污染危害,以及气候变化),而只有15%(n=104)的研究侧重于多种危害(大多是大气危害)。在空间明确的脆弱性研究中,近60%的研究使用了研究本身收集的数据(主要是地震灾害),而统计数据和组合数据都用于20%的情况(主要是洪水、气候变化以及社会和政治灾害)。统计数据的可传递性有限,通常被概括为适用于小规模研究,同时减少了文化和背景因素的作用。实地研究数据提供了高分辨率的信息,但它们的获取很耗时,因此固定在局部尺度和单一时间阶段。导致其他差异的潜在危险类型和合适的数据来源发现,44%的审查研究倾向于脆弱性地图的具体覆盖范围和分辨率。总之,我们发现的差异表明,空间显性脆弱性研究在两个主要方向上存在分歧:(i)地质和地貌研究侧重于物理脆弱性,使用自己的详细数据调查,缺乏与其他灾害的联系,以及(ii)其他研究(主要是大气危害和社会政治危害),重点关注社会或综合脆弱性,主要使用城市、区域和国家规模的统计或综合数据,偶尔也会努力整合多种危害。最后,尽管制图表示已成为脆弱性研究的一个常见组成部分,但我们的审查发现,地图的呈现只有模糊的合理化,缺乏解释不确定性和使用地图作为决策支持工具的指导方针。
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来源期刊
GeoScape
GeoScape GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
7.70%
发文量
7
审稿时长
4 weeks
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