What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses

A fashionable concept, resilience is now a must in both academic research and management. However, its polysemy nourishes many debates on its uses, heuristics and operational relevance. The purpose of this article is not to bring these debates to a close. Starting from a cross-disciplinary state of...

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Published in:Cybergeo
Main Authors: Magali Reghezza-Zitt, Samuel Rufat, Géraldine Djament-Tran, Antoine Le Blanc, Serge Lhomme
Format: Article
Language:German
Published: Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités 2012-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/25554
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author Magali Reghezza-Zitt
Samuel Rufat
Géraldine Djament-Tran
Antoine Le Blanc
Serge Lhomme
author_facet Magali Reghezza-Zitt
Samuel Rufat
Géraldine Djament-Tran
Antoine Le Blanc
Serge Lhomme
author_sort Magali Reghezza-Zitt
collection DOAJ
container_title Cybergeo
description A fashionable concept, resilience is now a must in both academic research and management. However, its polysemy nourishes many debates on its uses, heuristics and operational relevance. The purpose of this article is not to bring these debates to a close. Starting from a cross-disciplinary state of the art, we point out the incompatibilities between certain meanings and uses of the term. These inconsistencies raise theoretical issues, leading some researchers to reject the term for that matter, especially those outside the cindynics field. The analysis of the concept also brings out some methodological pitfalls. These are evident when attempting to translate theory into operational terms. Resilience is indeed seen as a promising response to recurrent difficulties in risk management. Nevertheless, it solves them only partially and produces new ones. Lastly, its implementation involves ethical and political risks. The injunction to resilience that seems to prevail internationally is in fact implying a number of moral and ideological assumptions which are not always clearly stated and remain serious issues.
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spelling doaj-art-ccea22101a9441dfa1cd14d69f4e91482025-09-16T14:13:55ZdeuUnité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-citésCybergeo1278-33662012-10-0110.4000/cybergeo.25554What Resilience Is Not: Uses and AbusesMagali Reghezza-ZittSamuel RufatGéraldine Djament-TranAntoine Le BlancSerge LhommeA fashionable concept, resilience is now a must in both academic research and management. However, its polysemy nourishes many debates on its uses, heuristics and operational relevance. The purpose of this article is not to bring these debates to a close. Starting from a cross-disciplinary state of the art, we point out the incompatibilities between certain meanings and uses of the term. These inconsistencies raise theoretical issues, leading some researchers to reject the term for that matter, especially those outside the cindynics field. The analysis of the concept also brings out some methodological pitfalls. These are evident when attempting to translate theory into operational terms. Resilience is indeed seen as a promising response to recurrent difficulties in risk management. Nevertheless, it solves them only partially and produces new ones. Lastly, its implementation involves ethical and political risks. The injunction to resilience that seems to prevail internationally is in fact implying a number of moral and ideological assumptions which are not always clearly stated and remain serious issues.https://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/25554hazardvulnerabilityresilienceideologymethodological pitfalls
spellingShingle Magali Reghezza-Zitt
Samuel Rufat
Géraldine Djament-Tran
Antoine Le Blanc
Serge Lhomme
What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
hazard
vulnerability
resilience
ideology
methodological pitfalls
title What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
title_full What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
title_fullStr What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
title_full_unstemmed What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
title_short What Resilience Is Not: Uses and Abuses
title_sort what resilience is not uses and abuses
topic hazard
vulnerability
resilience
ideology
methodological pitfalls
url https://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/25554
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