Integrating social capital with urban infrastructure networks for more resilient cities
Ariel Favier, Christine Hedde-von Westernhagen, Meghan Krieg, Bhaskar, Kumawat

TL;DR
This paper explores how integrating social capital with urban infrastructure networks can enhance city resilience by analyzing feedback mechanisms and simulating cascade failures in multilayer models.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated approach combining social and physical infrastructure analysis to improve urban disaster response and resilience strategies.
Findings
Cities with high accessibility show improved disaster resilience.
Social capital significantly influences recovery speed.
Simulation models reveal critical interdependencies for resilience.
Abstract
More than half of the world's population now lives in urban environments, which concentrate services and infrastructure to satisfy the material needs of a growing number of inhabitants. The interdependencies between physical infrastructure systems are required for cities to function efficiently, but simultaneously expose cities to new hazards. Failures that emerge from one infrastructure system and cascade through these interdependencies are becoming larger and more frequent due to climate change and growing urban environments. Because of the uneven distribution of resources and basic services, cascade failures often exacerbate pre-existing socioeconomic inequalities. Human communities rely on both social capital and infrastructure services to prepare for, manage, and recover from these challenging scenarios, but the overlap between social and physical infrastructure creates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmart Cities and Technologies · Infrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability Analysis
