Samantha E. M. Horn’s research while affiliated with University at Buffalo, State University of New York and other places

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Publications (1)


The Capabilities Approach Framework indicating the theorized relationship between resources, capabilities and functionings (adapted from Robeyns 2005)
Capabilities Approach framework applied to infrastructure disruptions at the household level indicating the relationship between infrastructure resources, household responses, and capabilities
Dot density map of the geographic distribution of the 832 respondents included in the final analysis. The color of the dot indicates the duration of power outage reported by each household
Number of households that reported disruptions to each capability type, in order of most reported disruptions types to least resported. The lighter bar indicates the number of households that reported capabilities as being disrupted but having relatively little impact on the household’s health and well-being, while the darker bar indicates the number of households that reported capabilities as being disrupted and having a significant impact on the household’s health and well-being. The counts inside each bar indicate the number of households reporting each level of impact, while the counts outside the end of the lighter bar indicate the total number of households reporting each type of disruption
Duration and nature of power outages experienced by respondents
Assessing the household burdens of infrastructure disruptions in Texas during Winter Storm Uri
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March 2024

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2 Citations

Sara K. E. Peterson

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Samantha E. M. Horn

In February 2021, severe winter weather conditions associated with Winter Storm Uri triggered an energy infrastructure failure in Texas. Most Texans lost electricity, some lost potable water, natural gas, and suffered other infrastructure-related service disruptions that had profound household consequences. Although several studies have documented the disparities in terms of the types and extent of disruptions Texans experienced during Uri, there is little information about the impact of these disruptions in terms of their burdens on households. Guided by the Capabilities Approach framework, a survey of Texan households was conducted to identify the outage characteristics and capability losses for different household types, as well as the burdens that those disruptions posed to households using both objective and subjective measures. Our results indicate that households that endured longer and constant electricity outages suffered more severe impacts across all measures, including more disrupted household capabilities, increased time, and financial costs to cope during the outages, as well as greater declines in reported life satisfaction. We found that low-income households, households with children, and households with disability challenges suffered more severe objective burdens during the storm, although subjective results for these households were mixed. Households with members over the age of 65 fared better in terms of objective measures, yet suffered more in terms of subjective well-being. Moreover, households that had prior experience with a prolonged outage reported significantly smaller reductions in well-being during the storm than other households, despite not showing any difference in objective measures. Ultimately, our results offer context-specific, post-event information about the impacts and needs of different types of households during Uri that are important for informing emergency management and community resilience planning.

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