Community Risk Assessment: Connecting Technical Knowledge with Local and Indigenous Knowledge
Community Risk Assessment: Connecting Technical Knowledge with Local and Indigenous Knowledge
Community Risk Assessment: Connecting Technical Knowledge with Local and Indigenous Knowledge
| Author | A/Prof Nader Naderpajouh , Dr Ali Zolghadr , Peyman Habibi Moshfegh , Amir Hossein Pakizeh , Prof David Schlosberg , Dr Aaron Opdyke , Prof Amanda Howard , Sara Morgan , A/Prof Floris Van Ogtrop , A/Prof Petr Matous , Dr Jodie Bailie , Dr Ali Hadigheh , A/Prof Hao Zhang , Prof Mary Crock , Prof Willem Vervoort |
| Abstract |
Two general approaches have been observed in community risk assessment. Top-down community risk assessments are often driven by agencies on macro scales. Meanwhile, bottom-up approaches are often driven by communities at local scales, placing the people at risk at the centre of the risk assessment process. Top-down approaches typically rely on technical, scientific and data-driven methods, while bottom-up approaches are rich in contextual, local and Indigenous knowledge. It is very common to see more quantitative and technical assessments in the top-down approaches in contrast to more qualitative and contextually rich assessments in the bottom-up approaches. Although the individual use of both approaches is extensively observed in different community risk assessment frameworks, there is a research gap concerning the benefits of their potential integration. |
| Year of Publication |
2024
|
| Date Published |
13/08/2024
|
| Institution |
Natural Hazards Research Australia
|
| City |
Melbourne
|
| Report Number |
34.2024
|
| ISBN Number |
978-1-923057-14-2
|
| Locators | Google Scholar |
| Project |
|---|
| Community risk assessment |