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Fires that matter: reconceptualizing fire risk to include interactions between humans and the natural environment

Virginia Iglesias, E. Natasha Stavros, Jennifer K. Balch, Kimiko Barrett, Jeanette Cobian‐Iñiguez, Cyrus M. Hester, Crystal A. Kolden, Stefan Leyk, R. Chelsea Nagy, Colleen E. Reid, Christine Wiedinmyer, Elizabeth Woolner, William R. Travis

2022Environmental Research Letters55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Increasing fire impacts across North America are associated with climate and vegetation change, greater exposure through development expansion, and less-well studied but salient social vulnerabilities. We are at a critical moment in the contemporary human-fire relationship, with an urgent need to transition from emergency response to proactive measures that build sustainable communities, protect human health, and restore the use of fire necessary for maintaining ecosystem processes. We propose an integrated risk factor that includes fire and smoke hazard, exposure, and vulnerability as a method to identify ‘fires that matter’, that is, fires that have potentially devastating impacts on our communities. This approach enables pathways to delineate and prioritise science-informed planning strategies most likely to increase community resilience to fires.

Topics & Concepts

Vulnerability (computing)HazardEnvironmental resource managementClimate changeResilience (materials science)Community resilienceSalientEnvironmental planningPsychological resilienceEcosystemWildland–urban interfaceEnvironmental scienceGeographyEcologyComputer scienceComputer securityPsychologyRedundancy (engineering)Operating systemBiologyPsychotherapistPhysicsArchaeologyThermodynamicsFire effects on ecosystemsDisaster Management and ResilienceFlood Risk Assessment and Management
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