City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies

The concept of resilience has in recent years been one of the more commonly used urban development concepts. In the social sciences, the term is understood as a dynamic process that reflects a relatively good adaptation, irrespective of the hazards or traumatic experiences. It is linked with the con...

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Main Authors: Mierzejewska Lidia, Wdowicka Magdalena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-04-01
Series:Quaestiones Geographicae
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2018-0018
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spelling doaj-509fd78eb7834aaa9132561b58e3e1e62021-09-05T21:23:39ZengSciendoQuaestiones Geographicae2081-63832018-04-0137271510.2478/quageo-2018-0018quageo-2018-0018City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept InaccuraciesMierzejewska Lidia0Wdowicka Magdalena1Institute of Socio-Economic Geography and Spatial Management, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, PolandInstitute of Socio-Economic Geography and Spatial Management, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, PolandThe concept of resilience has in recent years been one of the more commonly used urban development concepts. In the social sciences, the term is understood as a dynamic process that reflects a relatively good adaptation, irrespective of the hazards or traumatic experiences. It is linked with the concepts of risk, vulnerability and positive adaptation. The concept of resilience as used in the social sciences has been adapted by other disciplines, including research on the city, where the term is ambiguously and sometimes inconsistently defined. The aim of this study is to explain the term resilience, its reference to the city and to clear up ambiguities of the terminology related to the two lines of research on resilience in relation to the city as presented by the relevant literature: city resilience and the resilient city. Analyses show that both these terms, despite their widespread application, are at present imprecisely defined in the relevant literature and generally speaking used interchangeably, which makes their precise application difficult. In addition, the assumption that city resilience can be treated as a process that leads to a desired state of the resilient city, has not been confirmed. The correctness of the application of the second of these concepts (the resilient city) raises doubts, because it will probably never be possible to develop a city not vulnerable or fully resistant to various types of development perturbations.https://doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2018-0018resiliencecity resilienceresilient cityorganicist concept of the city
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mierzejewska Lidia
Wdowicka Magdalena
spellingShingle Mierzejewska Lidia
Wdowicka Magdalena
City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
Quaestiones Geographicae
resilience
city resilience
resilient city
organicist concept of the city
author_facet Mierzejewska Lidia
Wdowicka Magdalena
author_sort Mierzejewska Lidia
title City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
title_short City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
title_full City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
title_fullStr City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
title_full_unstemmed City Resilience vs. Resilient City: Terminological Intricacies and Concept Inaccuracies
title_sort city resilience vs. resilient city: terminological intricacies and concept inaccuracies
publisher Sciendo
series Quaestiones Geographicae
issn 2081-6383
publishDate 2018-04-01
description The concept of resilience has in recent years been one of the more commonly used urban development concepts. In the social sciences, the term is understood as a dynamic process that reflects a relatively good adaptation, irrespective of the hazards or traumatic experiences. It is linked with the concepts of risk, vulnerability and positive adaptation. The concept of resilience as used in the social sciences has been adapted by other disciplines, including research on the city, where the term is ambiguously and sometimes inconsistently defined. The aim of this study is to explain the term resilience, its reference to the city and to clear up ambiguities of the terminology related to the two lines of research on resilience in relation to the city as presented by the relevant literature: city resilience and the resilient city. Analyses show that both these terms, despite their widespread application, are at present imprecisely defined in the relevant literature and generally speaking used interchangeably, which makes their precise application difficult. In addition, the assumption that city resilience can be treated as a process that leads to a desired state of the resilient city, has not been confirmed. The correctness of the application of the second of these concepts (the resilient city) raises doubts, because it will probably never be possible to develop a city not vulnerable or fully resistant to various types of development perturbations.
topic resilience
city resilience
resilient city
organicist concept of the city
url https://doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2018-0018
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