Chapter 1 IntroductionChapter 2 Understanding disaster resilience: the emBRACE approaChapterChapter 3 Mobilising resources for resilienceChapter 4 Social Learning and Resilience Building in the emBRACE FrameworkChapter 5 Wicked problems - resilience, adaptation and complexityChapter 6 The emBRACE resilience framework: developing an integrated framework for evaluating community resilience to natural hazardsChapter 7 Disaster impact and land use data analysis in the context of a resilience relevant footprintChapter 8 Development of quantitative resilience indicators for measuring resilience at the local levelChapter 9 Managing Complex Systems: The Need to Structure Qualitative DataChapter 10 Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Indicators for Assessing Community Resilience to Natural HazardsChapter 11 Resilience, the limits of adaptation and the need for transformation in the context of multiple flood events in Central EuropeChapter 12 River and surface water flooding in Northern England: the civil protection-social protection nexusChapter 13 The role of risk perception and community networks in preparing for and responding to landslides: a Dolomite case studyChapter 14 The social life of heatwave in London: recasting the role of community and resilience.Chapter 15 Perceptions of Individual and Community Resilience to Earthquakes: A Case Study from Turkey
HUGH DEEMING, Principal Consultant, HD Research, Bentham, UKMAUREEN FORDHAM, Emerita Professor of Gender and Disaster Resilience, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; Centre Director, IRDR Centre for Gender and Disaster, UCL, UKCHRISTIAN KUHLICKE, Professor of Environmental Risks and Sustainability, joint appointment Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research and University of Potsdam, GermanyLYDIA PEDOTH, Senior Researcher, Eurac Research, Bolzano, ItalySTEFAN SCHNEIDERBAUER, Senior Researcher, Eurac Research, Bolzano, ItalyCHENEY SHREVE, Adjunct Researcher, Western Washington University, Resilience Institute, Washington, USA