Weaving Equity into Infrastructure Resilience Research and Practice: A Decadal Review and Future Directions
Natalie Coleman, Xiangpeng Li, Tina Comes, and Ali Mostafavi

TL;DR
This systematic review analyzes a decade of research on equity in infrastructure resilience during natural hazards, highlighting gaps, dominant themes, and future research directions to better integrate equity considerations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of equity research in infrastructure resilience, identifying key focus areas, methodological approaches, and gaps in current literature.
Findings
Interest in equity has exponentially increased.
Most studies are from the US and global north.
International studies rarely use location-intelligence data.
Abstract
After about a decade of research in this domain, what is missing is a systematic overview of the research agenda across different infrastructures and hazards. It is now imperative to evaluate the current progress and gaps. This paper presents a systematic review of equity literature on disrupted infrastructure during a natural hazard event. Following a systematic review protocol, we collected, screened, and evaluated almost 3,000 studies. Our analysis focuses on the intersection within the dimensions of the eight-dimensional assessment framework that distinguishes focus of the study, methodological approaches, and equity dimensions (distributional-demographic, distributional-spatial, procedural, and capacity equity). To conceptualize the intersection of the different dimensions of equity, we refer to pathways, which identify how equity is constructed, analyzed, and used. Significant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDisaster Management and Resilience · Infrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability Analysis · Flood Risk Assessment and Management
