Exposure to wildfires and health outcomes of vulnerable people: Evidence from US data
This paper investigates the causal effect of wildfire exposure on birth outcomes and older people’s health outcomes in United States (US).
This paper investigates the causal effect of wildfire exposure on birth outcomes and older people’s health outcomes in United States (US).
This article outlines an approach for understanding the ways that local social context influences differential community adaptation to wildfire risk. I explain how my approach drew from Wilkinson’s interactional theory of community during various stages of its evolution and describe a series of advancements developed while extending the theory to promote collective action for wildfire.
Optimized wildfire risk reduction strategies are generally not resilient in the event of unanticipated, or very rare events, presenting a hazard in risk assessments which otherwise rely on actuarial, mean-based statistics to characterize risk.