The emerging addition of resilience as a component of sustainability in urban policy

被引:46
作者
Davidson, Kathryn [1 ]
Thi Minh Phuong Nguyen [2 ]
Beilin, Ruth [3 ]
Briggs, Jessie [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Fac Architecture Bldg & Design, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[2] Univ South Australia, Sch Art Architecture & Design, Discipline Urban & Reg Planning, Level 3,Kaurna Bldg,City West Campus, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
[3] Univ Melbourne, Level 1,Room G55,Baldwin Spencer Bldg, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia
[4] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Design, Connected Cities Lab, Level 3,MSD Bldg 133,Mason Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia
关键词
Metropolitan plans; Urban resilience; Sustainability; Urban policy; CLIMATE-CHANGE; GOVERNANCE; RISK; MANAGEMENT; SYSTEMS; THINKING;
D O I
10.1016/j.cities.2019.03.012
中图分类号
TU98 [区域规划、城乡规划];
学科分类号
0814 ; 082803 ; 0833 ;
摘要
The concept of resilience is progressively capturing the interest of scholars and practitioners in the field of urban policy. This increase in interest is directed towards the need for a better understanding of the conditions for effective and legitimate governance in a complex, interconnected, and volatile world fraught with a new class of poorly understood systematic risk. We are progressively observing resilience as a component of sustainability as the dominant organising frame in the field of urban planning. The application of the adapted Wilkinson (2011) framework, which we situate within a broader framework for evaluating metropolitan plans (Nguyen, Davidson & Gleeson, 2018), reveals the extent to which newly released metropolitan plans are incorporating strategies for social-ecological resilience. Our point is to offer an early assessment of the framing of social-ecological resilience within the embedded understanding of metropolitan planning practice. Our research has revealed that social-ecological resilience thinking has been incorporated only to a limited extent into metropolitan planning strategies worldwide, as demonstrated through the evaluation of our two sites-OneNYC and Plan Melbourne. We have argued that OneNYC incorporates the strategies of social-ecological resilience to a greater extent than Plan Melbourne, possibly pointing to a strengthening governing system by incorporating processes of social learning and adaptation. We conclude by acknowledging the critical insights into the limitations of the reality of implementing these ideas of social-ecological resilience within policy settings (see Duit, 2016), and which requires urgent consideration within a fuller institutional study that must in any case await the fuller roll-out of social-ecological resilience in sustainability agendas within city strategic planning.
引用
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页码:1 / 9
页数:9
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