Thomas J. Huggins, Robin Peace, Stephen R. Hill, David M. Johnston, Alicia Cuevas Muñiz. Visually Modelling Collaborative Research into Innovative Community Disaster Resilience Practice, Strategy, and Governance[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2015, 6(3): 282-294. doi: 10.1007/s13753-015-0061-6
Citation: Thomas J. Huggins, Robin Peace, Stephen R. Hill, David M. Johnston, Alicia Cuevas Muñiz. Visually Modelling Collaborative Research into Innovative Community Disaster Resilience Practice, Strategy, and Governance[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2015, 6(3): 282-294. doi: 10.1007/s13753-015-0061-6

Visually Modelling Collaborative Research into Innovative Community Disaster Resilience Practice, Strategy, and Governance

doi: 10.1007/s13753-015-0061-6
Funds:

The current research was funded by the Earthquake Commission of New Zealand, The Institute of GNS Science and Massey University. Persons overseeing this funding did not play any role in the study design, collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, or in the writing and submission of this article. The research was conducted within the guidelines and procedures of the Massey University Human Ethics Committee.

  • Available Online: 2021-04-26
  • In 2013 a new collaborative center was established in Wellington, New Zealand to focus on integrating resilience research with the region’s community disaster resilience strategy. An earlier study with parties to this center had indicated that researcher and practitioner groups were divided by attention to their own immediate knowledge and skills, but agreed there was a need to maximize community resilience benefits amongst a regional population. An action research workshop of researchers and practitioners used a visual logic model to focus on the pragmatic benefits of improving community resilience. The visual logic model was used to design research activities that would improve the regional community resilience strategy, which was still in an early implementation phase. Ten of 14 workshop participants were interviewed following the workshop. Statistical content analysis of interview data highlighted certain strengths of the action research process: visual monitoring and evaluation planning was a catalyst for complicated conversations between two very different groups of professionals; and researchers became more focused on practical issues as a result. Other findings suggested that in future collaborative research governance would benefit from wider cycles of strategic intelligence, enhanced research contributions, and the use of different information formats for different purposes. Different formats for different purposes should also be considered when developing and implementing large-scale disaster risk reduction policies and strategies.
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