On the Concept of Resilience
Author(s) | Aguirre, Benigno E. | |
Date Accessioned | 2007-02-07T19:55:10Z | |
Date Available | 2007-02-07T19:55:10Z | |
Publication Date | 2006 | |
Abstract | The concept of resilience comprises physical, biological, psychological, social, and cultural systems. Resilience has been defined in many ways (for example, see Wisner, et al. 2005), to include an ability to "bounce back" and continue to function; predict and prevent potential problems; improvise and recombine resources in new ways; develop a collective and shared vision of dangers and what to do about them; and constant monitoring of threatening contextual conditions (Kendra and Wachtendorf, 2003). For our purpose, we define resilience as physical, biological, personality, social, and cultural systems' capability to effectively absorb, respond, and recover from an internally or externally induced set of extraordinary demands. The complexity inherent in the concept of resilience derives from these multiple systems in which it can be observed in simultaneity, which often do not have the same levels of resillience, and from the interactions and inter-effects that take place among these systems. | en |
URL | http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/2517 | |
Language | en_US | en |
Publisher | Disaster Research Center | en |
Part of Series | Preliminary Papers | en |
Part of Series | 356 | en |
Keywords | Resilience | en |
Keywords | Disaster Recovery | en |
Title | On the Concept of Resilience | en |
Type | Working Paper | en |