Feedback enhances greening during disaster recovery: A model of social and ecological processes in neighborhood scale investment
Authored by Keith G Tidball, Athena Aktipis
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ufug.2018.07.005
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Model Documentation:
ODD
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Abstract
In disaster recovery situations, including the post-Katrina recovery in
New Orleans, greening behavior (i.e., the planting of trees, flowers and
other plants) is thought to play an important role in social, ecological
and economic recovery. In this paper, we use agent-based modeling to
investigate and understand the roles of green attachment (which
encompasses place attachment and biophilia), engagement in local
ecological investment (i.e., greening), and social feedback (where
individuals who observe greening become more likely to engage in it). We
model this social-ecological feedback process, basing our parameters and
assumptions on real-world data and grounding our model in the Treme
neighborhood of New Orleans. We find that social-ecological feedback
enhances greening overall and leads to larger spatially continuous
regions with high rates of greening. We also find that social-ecological
feedback leads to tipping points in neighborhood greening, with
approximately 30\% of households needing to engage in greening for it to
reach asymptotically high levels. In addition, when green attachment is
high, this leads to more widespread greening behavior. We conclude that
social-ecological feedback processes such as those modeled here may play
important roles in neighborhood recovery after disasters such as
Hurricane Katrina.
Tags
Agent-based models
self-organization
environment
Leadership
health
Decision-Making
resilience
Ecosystem
Disaster
Stress
View
Greening
Place attachment
Biophilia
Socialecological systems
Inner-city