Understanding and enhancing future infrastructure resiliency: A socio-ecological approach
Understanding and enhancing future infrastructure resiliency: A socio-ecological approach
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.
407-426
Sage, Daniel
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Sircar, Indraneel
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Dainty, Andrew
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Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Goodier, C.
ac14427d-4567-48c1-ba50-566bb7ba6ce4
4 July 2015
Sage, Daniel
80462d6b-8ccd-4ffb-9e75-0b24d21fc317
Sircar, Indraneel
7b6d438e-5ab8-446c-89e0-36c99e46db39
Dainty, Andrew
6eeb1b6a-e63e-4766-b7a4-b140631b98a4
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Goodier, C.
ac14427d-4567-48c1-ba50-566bb7ba6ce4
Sage, Daniel, Sircar, Indraneel, Dainty, Andrew, Fussey, Pete and Goodier, C.
(2015)
Understanding and enhancing future infrastructure resiliency: A socio-ecological approach.
Disasters, 39 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/disa.12114).
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.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 29 December 2014
Published date: 4 July 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 495106
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495106
PURE UUID: 06222c7f-e3b9-476d-a39d-7b0a9bf8d3ba
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2024 17:42
Last modified: 30 Oct 2024 03:10
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Author:
Daniel Sage
Author:
Indraneel Sircar
Author:
Andrew Dainty
Author:
Pete Fussey
Author:
C. Goodier
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