| 英文摘要 |
In recent years, due to global climate change, Taiwan has experienced severe droughts and water shortages caused by typhoons not making landfall but approaching the island in 2021-2022. Additionally, urban areas have faced flooding from short bursts of heavy rainfall and a significant increase in dengue fever cases and deaths in 2023 due to high temperatures. Therefore, it's crucial to prioritize how communities respond to extreme weather disasters caused by global climate change and actively propose coping strategies. This study aims to analyze how property management copes with climate change disasters and explores key elements in community resilience against extreme weather disasters. Through literature review and expert surveys using Analytic Hierarchy Process, this research establishes the weighted proportions of key factors in managing extreme weather disaster prevention. The top five weighted factors in property management for community resilience against extreme weather disasters are: (1) management of preventing heavy rainfall and coastal flooding, (2) maintenance of regional drainage systems and flood control facilities, (3) management of preventing building damage from super typhoons, (4) prevention of landslides, and (5) management of preventing plant-related disasters and losses. Communities are advised to consider these top factors in their planning. Evidence-based case analysis verifies the results of this study, emphasizing that effective property management plays a crucial role in community resilience against extreme weather disasters such as short-duration heavy rainfall and super typhoons, as well as in mitigating droughts and abnormal temperature-related disasters. |