Urban resilience for whom, what, when, where, and why?
Abstract
In academic and policy discourse, the concept of urban resilience is proliferating. Social theorists, especially human geographers, have rightfully criticized that the underlying politics of resilience have been ignored and stress the importance of asking “resilience of what, to what, and for whom?” This paper calls for careful consideration of not just resilience for whom and what, but also where, when, and why. A three-phase process is introduced to enable these “five Ws” to be negotiated collectively and to engender critical reflection on the politics of urban resilience as plans, initiatives, and projects are conceived, discussed, and implemented. Deployed through the hypothetical case of green…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 107.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 92
Authors
2- SMSara MeerowCorresponding
University of Michigan
- JPJoshua P. Newell
University of Michigan
Topics & keywords
- Politics
- Resilience (materials science)
- Sociology
- Equity (law)
- Urban resilience
- Process (computing)
- Socio-ecological system
- Environmental ethics