| Literature DB >> 25546353 |
Daniel Sage1, Indraneel Sircar2, Andrew Dainty3, Pete Fussey4, Chris Goodier5.
Abstract
The resilience of any system, human or natural, centres on its capacity to adapt its structure, but not necessarily its function, to a new configuration in response to long-term socio-ecological change. In the long term, therefore, enhancing resilience involves more than simply improving a system's ability to resist an immediate threat or to recover to a stable past state. However, despite the prevalence of adaptive notions of resilience in academic discourse, it is apparent that infrastructure planners and policies largely continue to struggle to comprehend longer-term system adaptation in their understanding of resilience. Instead, a short-term, stable system (STSS) perspective on resilience is prevalent. This paper seeks to identify and problematise this perspective, presenting research based on the development of a heuristic 'scenario-episode' tool to address, and challenge, it in the context of United Kingdom infrastructure resilience. The aim is to help resilience practitioners to understand better the capacities of future infrastructure systems to respond to natural, malicious threats.Entities:
Keywords: critical infrastructure protection; resilience; scenario methodologies
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25546353 DOI: 10.1111/disa.12114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disasters ISSN: 0361-3666