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Constructing resilient futures: integrating UK multi-stakeholder transport and energy resilience for 2050

Constructing resilient futures: integrating UK multi-stakeholder transport and energy resilience for 2050
Constructing resilient futures: integrating UK multi-stakeholder transport and energy resilience for 2050
The 2005 terrorist attacks in London and 2007 flooding throughout the UK revealed the shortcomings of the UK Government approach of ‘governing through resilience’ in practice: low levels of stakeholder co-ordination, lack of understanding about critical infrastructure interdependencies, and little attention to long-term adaptation. We found that developing futures scenarios coupled with natural and malicious hazard episodes provided an effective way to draw in key stakeholders to engage with and address these problems. Starting with a detailed analysis of extant futures studies, scenarios were combined with episodes in order to both draw stakeholders out of their institutional contexts by setting the exercise in the future and to elicit participant responses during future crisis events. A procedure was developed and applied to construct integrated scenario-episodes built upon existing scenarios in order to investigate multi-stakeholder interactions around the resilience of energy and transport infrastructures. The full resulting scenario-episode narratives are also presented. These scenario-narratives were applied in key stakeholder focus groups to address the gaps in the aforementioned ‘governing through resilience’. Participants actively engaged with these scenario-episodes in order to highlight overlapping conceptualisations of ‘resilience’, identify critical infrastructure interdependencies, and reflect deeper and more collaboratively on the longer-term resilience implications.
0016-3287
49-63
Sircar, Indraneel
7b6d438e-5ab8-446c-89e0-36c99e46db39
Sage, D.
80462d6b-8ccd-4ffb-9e75-0b24d21fc317
Goodier, Chris
ac14427d-4567-48c1-ba50-566bb7ba6ce4
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Dainty, Andrew
6eeb1b6a-e63e-4766-b7a4-b140631b98a4
Sircar, Indraneel
7b6d438e-5ab8-446c-89e0-36c99e46db39
Sage, D.
80462d6b-8ccd-4ffb-9e75-0b24d21fc317
Goodier, Chris
ac14427d-4567-48c1-ba50-566bb7ba6ce4
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Dainty, Andrew
6eeb1b6a-e63e-4766-b7a4-b140631b98a4

Sircar, Indraneel, Sage, D., Goodier, Chris, Fussey, Pete and Dainty, Andrew (2013) Constructing resilient futures: integrating UK multi-stakeholder transport and energy resilience for 2050. Futures, 49, 49-63. (doi:10.1016/j.futures.2013.04.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The 2005 terrorist attacks in London and 2007 flooding throughout the UK revealed the shortcomings of the UK Government approach of ‘governing through resilience’ in practice: low levels of stakeholder co-ordination, lack of understanding about critical infrastructure interdependencies, and little attention to long-term adaptation. We found that developing futures scenarios coupled with natural and malicious hazard episodes provided an effective way to draw in key stakeholders to engage with and address these problems. Starting with a detailed analysis of extant futures studies, scenarios were combined with episodes in order to both draw stakeholders out of their institutional contexts by setting the exercise in the future and to elicit participant responses during future crisis events. A procedure was developed and applied to construct integrated scenario-episodes built upon existing scenarios in order to investigate multi-stakeholder interactions around the resilience of energy and transport infrastructures. The full resulting scenario-episode narratives are also presented. These scenario-narratives were applied in key stakeholder focus groups to address the gaps in the aforementioned ‘governing through resilience’. Participants actively engaged with these scenario-episodes in order to highlight overlapping conceptualisations of ‘resilience’, identify critical infrastructure interdependencies, and reflect deeper and more collaboratively on the longer-term resilience implications.

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More information

Published date: 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495072
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495072
ISSN: 0016-3287
PURE UUID: 747b344c-2b4d-4aa1-a394-474664246e0b
ORCID for Pete Fussey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1374-7133

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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2024 17:58
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Indraneel Sircar
Author: D. Sage
Author: Chris Goodier
Author: Pete Fussey ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Dainty

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