| Literature DB >> 24447588 |
Peter Allmark1, Sadiq Bhanbhro, Tom Chrisp.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been suggested that Public Health professionals focus on community resilience in tackling chronic problems, such as poverty and deprivation; is this approach useful? DISCUSSION: Resilience is always i) of something ii) to something iii) to an endpoint, as in i) a rubber ball, ii) to a blunt force, iii) to its original shape. "Community resilience" might be: of a neighbourhood, to a flu pandemic, with the endpoint, to return to normality. In these two examples, the endpoint is as-you-were. This is unsuitable for some examples of resilience. A child that is resilient to an abusive upbringing has an endpoint of living a happy life despite that upbringing: this is an as-you-should-be endpoint. Similarly, a chronically deprived community cannot have the endpoint of returning to chronic deprivation: so what is its endpoint? Roughly, it is an as-you-should-be endpoint: to provide an environment for inhabitants to live well. Thus resilient communities will be those that do this in the face of challenges. How can they be identified?One method uses statistical outliers, neighbourhoods that do better than would be expected on a range of outcomes given a range of stressors. This method tells us that a neighbourhood is resilient but not why it is. In response, a number of researchers have attributed characteristics to resilient communities; however, these generally fail to distinguish characteristics of a good community from those of a resilient one. Making this distinction is difficult and we have not seen it successfully done; more importantly, it is arguably unnecessary.There already exist approaches in Public Health to assessing and developing communities faced with chronic problems, typically tied to notions such as Social Capital. Community resilience to chronic problems, if it makes sense at all, is likely to be a property that emerges from the various assets in a community such as human capital, built capital and natural capital.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24447588 PMCID: PMC3905650 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-62
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Different uses of the term resilience
| Rubber ball | Blunt force | Form previous to blunt force |
| Ecosystem | e.g. Oil spill | Previous biodiversity |
| Organisation | e.g. Supermarket supply-chain problem | Previous supply of goods to customers |
| Individual psychology | e.g. Mugging | Mentally healthy life |
| Communities | e.g. Earthquake | Previous state of lifestyle for community members |
Summary of new terminology
| Something’s resilience is a function of its ability to reach an endpoint having been subject to a stressor (or distorting force) that tends to move it away from that endpoint. | |
| The paradigm endpoint is of an as-you-were type; that is, something’s resilience is the extent to which it can revert to the state it was in before being subject to the stressor (as with a rubber ball subject to a blunt force). | |
| However the term ‘resilience’ is sometimes applied in cases where an as-you-were endpoint would not apply. For example, a child growing up in an abusive family would be deemed resilient if he developed into a well-balanced adult, not if he remained an abused child. Here it seems better to talk of an as-you-should-be endpoint. | |
| A stressor is acute if its impact is fairly brief: examples include a rubber ball thrown against a wall and a community subject to an earthquake. It is chronic if its impact is long term: examples include a rubber ball stored long term under pressure and a community subject to chronic poverty. |
Community stressors and endpoints
| Purpose e.g. political association | A) Database loss | As-you-were1 | (To campaign for) political goals |
| C) Ageing membership, loss of leader, internal argument | |||
| Culture e.g. religion, ethnicity | A) Violent assault on religious Centre | As-you-were | Maintenance of religion, language and so on |
| C) Young people exposed to dominant antithetical culture | |||
| Location e.g. neighbourhood | A) Earthquake | As-you-were | Previous state of lifestyle for community members |
| C) Poverty, unemployment | ? | ? |
1There is room to dispute whether the endpoint of a political association is as-you-were (the activity of promoting political ends) or as-you-should-be (the state of achieving those ends). We have taken it to be the former as the political association would lose its purpose and, presumably, dissolve if its ends were achieved.
Neighbourhood chronic stressors and endpoint
| Location e.g. neighbourhood | C) Poverty, unemployment | As-you-should-be | Provides good environment for human functioning. |
Figure 1Identifying outlier neighbourhoods.
Characteristics attributed to resilient communities
| Residents of a community have a sense of belonging and orientation to a common purpose | [ |
| Communities have social and organisational networks | [ |
| Communities have access to knowledge and resources, community hope, knowledge promotion skills | [ |
| Communities have strong values on avoiding crime, good parenting, education and work success | [ |
| Communities with cultural pluralism, inclusivity and social cohesion | [ |
| Communities with infrastructure and support services | [ |
| Communities have resources and plans that facilitate coping and adaption in adversity | [ |
| Communities with vibrant participation, shared decision making and collective action | [ |
| Age profile | [ |
| Social physical context: physical environment, housing | [ |
| Population stability, attracting and retaining population | [ |
| Facilities and amenities, service provision | [ |