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Pressure and Release Model×Hazards-of-Place Model of Vulnerability×
DziedzinaDisaster StudiesDisaster Studies
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania19942000
TwórcaBen Wisner, Piers Blaikie, Terry Cannon & Ian DavisSusan L. Cutter, Jerry T. Mitchell & Michael S. Scott
TypCausal-chain framework for the social production of disaster vulnerabilityPlace-based spatial model integrating biophysical and social vulnerability
Źródło pierwotneWisner, B., Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., & Davis, I. (2004). At Risk: Natural Hazards, People's Vulnerability and Disasters (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN: 9780415252164Cutter, S. L., Mitchell, J. T., & Scott, M. S. (2000). Revealing the Vulnerability of People and Places: A Case Study of Georgetown County, South Carolina. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 90(4), 713-737. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyPAR Model, Pressure and Release Framework, Crunch ModelHazards-of-Place Vulnerability Model, Place-Based Vulnerability Assessment, Hazards of Place Model
Pokrewne33
PodsumowanieThe Pressure and Release model (PAR), developed by Ben Wisner, Piers Blaikie, Terry Cannon, and Ian Davis in their book At Risk, is the foundational framework for analyzing disasters as socially produced rather than purely natural events. It conceptualizes a disaster as the intersection of two opposing forces: a natural hazard on one side and, on the other, a progression of vulnerability that builds from deep root causes through dynamic pressures into concrete unsafe conditions. The metaphor is a nutcracker or 'crunch': the hazard squeezes a population whose vulnerability has been progressively constructed by political, economic, and social processes. Risk is expressed as the product of hazard and vulnerability, and the model's hopeful corollary — the 'release' — is that reducing risk means tracing the chain backward and relieving the pressures, addressing unsafe conditions, dynamic pressures, and ultimately root causes.The Hazards-of-Place model, introduced by Susan Cutter, Jerry Mitchell, and Michael Scott in a 2000 case study of Georgetown County, South Carolina, is a place-based, spatially explicit framework for assessing vulnerability to environmental hazards. Its central insight is that vulnerability is the product of two distinct components that come together at a location: biophysical vulnerability — the hazard exposure and physical conditions of a place — and social vulnerability — the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics that shape how populations there can prepare for, respond to, and recover from hazards. Implemented in a geographic information system, the model overlays hazard-risk layers (moderated by mitigation) with social-vulnerability layers to produce an integrated map of overall place vulnerability. By marrying the physical and the social in geographic space, it bridges the technocratic hazards tradition and the social-vulnerability tradition and became a foundation of modern vulnerability science.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Pressure and Release Model · Hazards-of-Place Model of Vulnerability. Pobrano 2026-06-25 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare