
Resilience of Oregon Coastal Communities in Response to External Stressors
This study gathers insights from the leaders and residents in of six Oregon coastal communities
to analyze what factors affected their resilience in response to external stressors. The impetus for
the study was the creation of nearshore marine reserves off the coast of Oregon which included a
mandate for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) to investigate the social and
economic impacts of the reserves on nearby communities. Interviews were conducted with
community members in Garibaldi, Depoe Bay, Newport, Florence, Port Orford, and Gold Beach
to understand how the different communities had demonstrated resilience and what factors
determined their degree of resilience. Individual community case studies were developed from
interviews in the communities and were then used to compare and contrast the different stressors,
impacts, responses, enabling factors, and constraining factors experienced across the
communities. The factors of resilience identified through this analysis were: the presence of
foundational assets; community livability; the capacity for effective action; community cohesion,
engagement, and support; and the salience of external stressors relative to internal stressors. This
study includes implications related to these factors of resilience meant to inform policymakers on
how best to support and enhance community resilience to external stressors. These implications
include: keeping in mind the need for a healthy demographic within a community; identifying
and working within the community aspirations; and the management of community-agency
tensions through the recognition of common goals and objectives. These findings are meant to
support policymakers in enhancing resilience of these and other communities.
Ackerman, Richard
Neuenfeldt, Rachel
Eggermont, Theo
Burbidge, Mike
Lehrman, Joanna
Wells, Nathan
Chen, Xi
Wondolleck, Julia