Neutrosophic method for evaluating indicators in a state of emergency due to public calamity

Authors

  • Deinier Ros Álvarez Research Professor, Universidad Regional Autónoma de los Andes, Quevedo Campus. Ecuador.
  • Christian Roberto Chávez Carrillo Independent Researcher. Ecuador.
  • Marcia Judith Freire Zavala Independent Researcher. Ecuador.

Keywords:

expert criteria, evaluation of indicators, state of exception, evaluation and decision, neutrosophic method

Abstract

This work analyzes the state of exception due to public calamity based on the study of ruling No. 3-20-ee/20 of the Constitutional Court of Ecuador; motivated by the presentation by the President of the Republic of Executive Decree No. 1074 of June 15, 2020, regarding the state of emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective of the research is to develop a neutrosophic method to evaluate indicators in the state of exception due to public calamity. A descriptive, observational, cross-sectional methodology is applied. The research implements the neutrosophic expert criteria for evaluation and decision. Scientific research methods were used: deductive-inductive when studying from the generalities to the particularities of each of the doctrinal, legal and jurisprudential components that have been developed from the analysis of the arguments presented in opinion No. 3-20-EE/20; as well as the analytical method to break down the main characteristics of the topics discussed, also relying on the exegetical and historical method. The research uses single value neutrosophic numbers to represent uncertainty. The result was a neutrosophic method capable of evaluating indicators in the state of emergency due to public calamity demonstrated through a practical example.

Published

2023-11-21

How to Cite

Neutrosophic method for evaluating indicators in a state of emergency due to public calamity. (2023). Revista Asociación Latinoamericana De Ciencias Neutrosóficas. ISSN 2574-1101, 29, 01-08. http://fs.unm.edu/NCML2/index.php/112/article/view/412