A New Metric for Community Resilience

Though the need for resilient communities is obvious, exactly how to measure resilience is less obvious. Edward J. Jepson, Jr. provides a new metric of the evidence of a community's resilience and produces a corresponding ranking of 30 U.S. cities.

7 minute read

January 20, 2016, 2:00 PM PST

By Edward J. Jepson Jr.

New York Sandy Power Outage

david_shankbone / Flickr

As recognition of communities as complex systems becomes increasingly widespread and established in the planning profession, the concept of resilience is emerging as a major topic of interest and discussion among planners. So far, attention has focused on how the concept of resilience, as it has been characterized for non-human systems, can be translated for application to human systems (e.g., Pendall et al. 2009). Here, I present a new index for measuring the progress of communities in becoming more resilient. 

Resilience is generally recognized as the ability of a complex system to adapt to change. This definition can be further refined as the ability of a complex system to maintain its integrity by responding successfully to threatening disturbances—either in the form of singular shocks or ongoing stresses.

As complex systems, human communities can be studied in terms of their resilience. Most of the planning and development literature focuses on the systemic characteristics and capacities thatcontributeto a community's resilience. These include the following:  

  • Self-organizing (semi-autonomy, inclusivity)
  • Visioning/anticipatory
  • Collaborative (formal and informal institutional networking)
  • Entrepreneurial/innovative
  • Self-critical/self-correcting
  • Knowledge-building (as a result of experimentation and with respect to communities as complex systems)
  • Diverse in terms of function and response [1]

The Resilience Capacity Index provides an example of the use of these types of characteristics and capacities to measure community resilience. The Rockefeller Foundation is also developing an index derived from a detailed and extensive framework that includes community engagement, leadership, and other contributing factors.

A different approach to studying resilience would be to evaluate communities in terms of evidence of their resilience. Instead of their inputs to resilience (i.e., the systemic characteristics that have the potential to contribute to a community's resilience), this different approach would measure resilience as output, that is, the outcome produced by such characteristics. Thus, the two approaches are complementary: when used together they have the potential to increase our understanding of both.

Such an approach would require the identification of core functional requirements that qualify a community as a system, such as employment opportunities and safety. These may be viewed as core because their absence or degradation would make it more difficult for the community and its residents to provide and enjoy such benefits as recreational and cultural amenities. In essence, then, the presence of employment opportunities and a safe environment are necessary for a community to function successfully as a system. Conversely, their absence is evidence of systemic dysfunction and the need for new actions or even a transformation of the existing system.  

Simply providing these core functions does not ensure a community's success as a system. A community system is also defined in terms of a variety of "non-core" functions, such as recreational and cultural amenities. The presence of "core" functions suggests only that a community has the capacity to provide these other "non-core" functions, not necessarily that it will. For many people, the availability and quality of these types of functions influences their decision about where to live. Because people are the key agents in community systems, a community's ability to attract and retain residents can then be viewed as additional evidence of its success as a system.  

On the basis of these considerations, unemployment rate, violent crime rate, and population change can be identified as key characteristics that reflect and determine a community's condition of resilience, i.e., one that reflects effective response to the numerous economic, environmental, and social stresses that it encounters on a regular and ongoing basis.

I propose a resilience indicator that combines measurement of unemployment, violent crime, and population in terms of their variability, magnitude, and trend over time.[2] Calculating this indicator for 30 U.S. cities resulted in the ranking contained in the table below, organizing cities from low to high, with the lowest score corresponding to high resilience.[3] Austin, Texas ranked as the most resilient city in the group, and Detroit, Michigan ranked as the least resilient.

Resilience Rank for 30 U.S. Cities

Rank

City

Resilience Indicator*

1

Austin, TX

1.49

2

San Antonio, TX

1.90

3

New York, NY

2.01

4

Portland, OR

2.09

5

Ann Arbor, MI

2.22

6

Madison, WI

2.33

7

Raleigh, NC

2.34

8

Des Moines, IA

2.37

9

Boston, MA

2.38

10

Denver, CO

2.39

11

Erie, PA

2.45

12

Knoxville, TN

2.61

13

Minneapolis, MN

2.73

14

Miami, FL

2.75

15

Los Angeles, CA

2.85

16

New Orleans, LA

2.95

17

Kansas City, MO

3.04

18

Pittsburgh, PA

3.05

19

Atlanta, GA

3.07

20

Nashville, TN

3.19

21

Youngstown, OH

3.30

22

Buffalo, NY

3.44

23

Birmingham, AL

3.54

24

Cleveland, OH

3.57

25

Indianapolis, IN

4.03

26

Milwaukee, WI

4.10

27

Las Vegas, NV

4.23

28

Philadelphia, PA

4.26

29

Memphis, TN

5.38

30

Detroit, MI

5.45

*Indicator value is inversely associated with level of resilience.

It is important to note that such an indicator does not measure a community's sustainability. While many adaptations make a community more sustainable and resilient—such as bike lanes or low-income, energy-efficient housing—there are many others that would not have that combined effect. For example, the introduction of a new pesticide may reverse declining agricultural production but still contaminate the environment. Or while the construction of a new road may respond to changing traffic conditions, it will also cause environmental damage. As brilliantly analyzed and pointed out by Derissen et al. (2011), there are many factors that determine whether a resilient system is also a sustainable one.[4]   

The value of a resilience indicator such as the one proposed is proven when communities compare themselves with other communities that score higher, focusing on the input characteristics and capacities that have been identified in the literature. For example, a low-scoring community may be motivated to evaluate its community engagement mechanisms compared to those of a higher-scoring peer community. A resilience indicator of this kind would also make possible measurement of the extent to which changes to such inputs—through direct policy and organizational interventions—produce effects in a community's resilience over time.

As a property of sustainable systems, resilience is an important community development concept. An indicator such as the one proposed here can be applied to all communities, rather than just those that have experienced a significant shock. This being the case, it can serve as a basis for systemic improvement among all communities, as well as the academic study of the capacities that are theorized to contribute to resilience and, by extension, sustainability.    

Edward J. Jepson, Jr. is an adjunct professor of planning and planning consultant living in Knoxville, Tennessee. For information about how the resilience index is calculated, he can be contacted at [email protected].


Sources

Booher, D.E. and J.E. Innes. 2010. Governance for resilience: CAFED as a complex adaptive network for resource management. Ecology and Society 15(3): 35 (online).

Bristow, G. 2010. Resilient regions: re-'place'ing regional competitiveness. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3(1): 153-167.

Derissen, S., M. F. Quaas, and S. Baumgartner. 2011. The relationship between resilience and sustainability of ecological-economic systems. Ecological Economics 70(6): 1121-1128.

Elmqvist, T. 2013. Urban sustainability and resilience: why we need to focus on scales. The Nature of Cities. Available at http://www.thenatureofcities.com/2013/03/27/urban-sustainability-and-re….

Folke, C., S. Carpenter, T. Elmqvist, L. Gunderson, C.S. Hollling, and B. Walker. 2002. Resilience and sustainable development: building adaptive capacity in a world of transformations. Ambio 31(5): 437-440.

Folke, C., T. Hahn, P. Olsson, and J. Norberg. 2005. Adaptive governance of social-ecological systems. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 30: 441-473.

Folke, C. 2006. Resilience: the emergence of a perspective for social-ecological systems analysis. Global Environmental Change 16(3): 253-267.

Holling, C.S., L.H. Gunderson, & G.D. Peterson. 2002. Sustainability and panarchies. In Panarchy: Understanding transformations in human and natural systems. In L.H. Gunderson & C.S. Holling, eds. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

Maddox, D. 2013. The cities we want: Resilient, sustainable and livable. The Nature of Cities. Available at http://www.thenatureofcities.com/2013/05/08/the-cities-we-want-resilien….

Norris, F., S. Stevens, B. Pfefferbaum, K. Wyche, and R. Pfefferbaum. 2008. Community resilience as a metaphor, theory, set of capacities, and strategy for disaster readiness. American Journal of Community Psychology, 41(1-2): 127-150.

Pendall, R., K.A. Foster, and M. Cowell. 2009. Resilience and regions: Building understanding of the metaphor. Cambridge Journal of Regions: Economy and Society 3(1): 1-14.

Redman, C.L. 2014. Should sustainability and resilience be combined or remain distinct pursuits? Ecology and Society 19, 2: 37. Available at http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art37.

Walker, B. and D. Salt. 2006. Resilience thinking: Sustaining ecosystems and people in a changing world. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

Webb, C.T. 2007. What is the role of ecology in understanding ecosystem resilience? Bioscience 57(6): 470-471.

Wilkinson, C. 2011. Social-ecological resilience: Insights and issues for planning theory. Planning Theory 11(2): 148-169.


Notes

[1] Functional diversity is reflected in doing different things, response diversity is reflected in doing things differently.

[2] The formula for calculating the resilience index can be obtained by contacting the author at [email protected].

[3] The 30 cities were not randomly selected, and the results are not intended to be representative of U.S. cities generally.

[4] For more discussion of the relationship between resilience and sustainability see Elmqvist, 2013; Maddox, 2013; Redman, 2014.

Aerial view of homes on green hillsides in Daly City, California.

Depopulation Patterns Get Weird

A recent ranking of “declining” cities heavily features some of the most expensive cities in the country — including New York City and a half-dozen in the San Francisco Bay Area.

April 10, 2024 - California Planning & Development Report

Aerial view of Oakland, California with bay in background

California Exodus: Population Drops Below 39 Million

Never mind the 40 million that demographers predicted the Golden State would reach by 2018. The state's population dipped below 39 million to 38.965 million last July, according to Census data released in March, the lowest since 2015.

April 11, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

A view straight down LaSalle Street, lined by high-rise buildings with an El line running horizontally over the street.

Chicago to Turn High-Rise Offices into Housing

Four commercial buildings in the Chicago Loop have been approved for redevelopment into housing in a bid to revitalize the city’s downtown post-pandemic.

April 10, 2024 - Chicago Construction News

Aerial view of downtown Rochester, New York with river and bridge in foreground.

Rochester Shows Possible Future for Former Highways

A former freeway is undergoing a massive redevelopment that goes beyond highway removal to reconnect and revitalize surrounding areas.

8 minutes ago - Bloomberg CityLab

Large blank mall building with only two cars in large parking lot.

Pennsylvania Mall Conversion Bill Passes House

If passed, the bill would promote the adaptive reuse of defunct commercial buildings.

1 hour ago - Central Penn Business Journal

Children sit on temporary street furniture next to book cart at pop-up reading event at open streets event in Sunset Park in New York City.

Meet NYC’s New Office of Livable Streets

The NYC DOT program will build on pandemic-era initiatives to promote safe and comfortable streets that enhance community and expand uses beyond just moving cars.

2 hours ago - Next City

News from HUD User

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Call for Speakers

Mpact Transit + Community

New Updates on PD&R Edge

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Write for Planetizen

Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools

This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.

Planning for Universal Design

Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.