Resilience—The role of place and time

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Patrick T. Moss
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The importance of this concept has become apparent to me with the development of the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Resilience Centre, which has been developed to bring together researchers from a wide range of disciplines within the institution, facilitate engagement with other academic institutions, government, and industry, and provide the capacity to develop multidisciplinary teams centred on resilience. The key focus areas are climate, communities, disasters infrastructure, and nature, which match QUT strengths, as well as having a high degree of crossover. I am directly involved with the QUT Resilience Centre (as the Climate Theme Leader), and with its development, I have grappled with the definition and practicalities of “resilience,” as well as the role that place and time play in understanding the concept.</p><p>As a geographer, I see “place” as a central component of “resilience,” that is, the resilience of a system, whether natural or human, is directly related to the geographic characteristics of a location. For instance, the resilience of Brisbane is directly related to the place it is situated within. This is starkly illustrated by the Brisbane River or Maiwar (indigenous name of the river) and colloquially referred to as “The Brown Snake” (QUT [Queensland University of Technology] Digital Collection, <span>2024</span>). Its modern-day characteristics (since European colonisation) are shaped by the fact it is tidal and has experienced extensive urbanisation and dredging, which in combination has significantly increased sediment load over the last 200 years (ABC, <span>2017</span>). Despite these alterations, the Brisbane River has been relatively resilient in the face of significant land use and land cover changes (Kemp et al., <span>2015</span>). However, particular challenges for resilience in the 21st century in the context of the Brisbane River are disasters in the form of floods, with the significant flood events of January 2011 and February 2022.</p><p>A wealth of academic discourse has emerged in relation to these events, with a focus on framing the floods in the context of media definitions and broader community narratives (Bohensky &amp; Leitch, <span>2014</span>), building community resilience (Hayes &amp; Goonetilleke, <span>2012</span>), and flood immunity myths (Cook, <span>2018</span>). In addition, much of the research into resilience has been implemented in planning for climate resilience (Brage &amp; Leardini, <span>2018</span>), water sensitive design (Zaman &amp; Chowdhooree, <span>2022</span>), and restoring ecological infrastructure (Warner, <span>2011</span>). In many ways, resilience is a direct response to pressing concerns (in this case, the flooding of the Brisbane River), but also characterises the importance of place in definitions, as well as highlighting the complexity associated with the term. Bohensky and Leitch (<span>2014</span>), for example, show that media coverage reinforced characteristics of resilience by recognising self-reliance, community spirit, and shared experiences for learning, as well as enunciating the role of climate change in increased risks of extreme events and trade-offs in planning. They also highlight that media discourse may constrain resilience through political opportunity and blame, as well as not paying heed to longer-term aspects. In addition, Cook (<span>2018</span>) highlights the myth “it will never happen again” from the 2011 floods, which was quickly dispelled by the more recent 2022 floods. The example of the Brisbane River clearly illustrates the important role that “place” plays with “resilience,” with different sets of geographic characteristics (both physical and social) influencing the resilience of different locations, particularly in terms of responses.</p><p>As a researcher primarily focused on reconstructing past environments, I can see that time is also a central concept related to resilience. This is particularly true with restoration activities, through the provision of critical baseline data, gaining insight into past periods of extreme climate change and understanding tipping points, namely, how far a system can be pushed until it changes into a new state (in-built resilience). Research focused on peatland restoration clearly highlights the importance of resilience in restoration activities. Moss (<span>2023</span>) provides an overview of the importance of peatlands in an Australian context and highlights that peat contains a record (from inception), through palaeoecological and geochemical proxies, of environmental change and how this has influenced the state of the ecosystem. Similarly, Ramdzan et al. (<span>2022</span>, <span>2023</span>) examine a similar phenomenon in the context of Southeast Asian peatlands, which provides insight into how peatland systems have altered over thousands of years, with a particular focus on drivers of change.</p><p>These drivers provide crucial information, including baseline data, that can underpin restoration efforts and more effectively utilise resources, as well as examining how resilient a system is to past periods of environmental change. This is particularly useful as it can support the extensive peatland restoration efforts currently being undertaken across Kalimantan and Sumatra by the Indonesian Government and the specific Peatland Restoration Agency (known as the BRG). Similar initiatives are being undertaken across the globe (see for example the United Nations Environmental Programs Global Peatland Assessment, https://www.unep.org/resources/global-peatlands-assessment-2022) and incorporate community wellbeing, sustainable economic production, and indigenous knowledge. Terzano et al. (<span>2022</span>) outline the critical importance of community participation in peatland restoration efforts, illustrating that utilising resilience as an effective management or policy tool requires a multidisciplinary approach, particularly in terms of bringing together the physical and social sciences and facilitating a deeper temporal perspective through palaeoenvironment research (incorporating palaeoecology, geochemistry, and archaeology).</p><p>As highlighted above, resilience is intimately linked to place and time, two key facets that are strongly integrated with geography. The case studies of flooding in Brisbane illustrate the importance of place while peatland restoration illuminates the value of time in utilising resilience as an effective management and/or policy tool. Although in both cases, place and time are vital for effective application of a resilience-based approach, I would argue that geography plays a seminal role in the development of resilience in academic discourse, as well as effectively translating it into responses, whether management or policy based. This is not only based on the innate significant of place and time in the discipline, but also the long history of geography examining key issues from both a physical and a human perspective. I also suggest that resilience could act as an important anchoring point to bring physical and human geographers together, and in collaboration with other disciplines to address the big challenges we are facing in the 21st century. With this vein, I strongly encourage submission of articles focused on resilience in the journal, whether this is critically examining the concept or applying it in a range of activities that cut across social and natural dimensions.</p><p>None.</p><p>No ethics approval or funding statement is associated with this commentary.</p>","PeriodicalId":47233,"journal":{"name":"Geographical Research","volume":"63 1","pages":"6-8"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.70000","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geographical Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.70000","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

“Resilience” is an increasingly important term, which is used to characterise the ability of a system (either human or natural) to cope with uncertainty and change. This term has been supplementing “sustainability” and “vulnerability” in policy and academic discourse, as well as being positioned as a response to global climate change and natural hazards in particular (Achour et al., 2015; Weichselgartner & Kelman, 2015). The importance of this concept has become apparent to me with the development of the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Resilience Centre, which has been developed to bring together researchers from a wide range of disciplines within the institution, facilitate engagement with other academic institutions, government, and industry, and provide the capacity to develop multidisciplinary teams centred on resilience. The key focus areas are climate, communities, disasters infrastructure, and nature, which match QUT strengths, as well as having a high degree of crossover. I am directly involved with the QUT Resilience Centre (as the Climate Theme Leader), and with its development, I have grappled with the definition and practicalities of “resilience,” as well as the role that place and time play in understanding the concept.

As a geographer, I see “place” as a central component of “resilience,” that is, the resilience of a system, whether natural or human, is directly related to the geographic characteristics of a location. For instance, the resilience of Brisbane is directly related to the place it is situated within. This is starkly illustrated by the Brisbane River or Maiwar (indigenous name of the river) and colloquially referred to as “The Brown Snake” (QUT [Queensland University of Technology] Digital Collection, 2024). Its modern-day characteristics (since European colonisation) are shaped by the fact it is tidal and has experienced extensive urbanisation and dredging, which in combination has significantly increased sediment load over the last 200 years (ABC, 2017). Despite these alterations, the Brisbane River has been relatively resilient in the face of significant land use and land cover changes (Kemp et al., 2015). However, particular challenges for resilience in the 21st century in the context of the Brisbane River are disasters in the form of floods, with the significant flood events of January 2011 and February 2022.

A wealth of academic discourse has emerged in relation to these events, with a focus on framing the floods in the context of media definitions and broader community narratives (Bohensky & Leitch, 2014), building community resilience (Hayes & Goonetilleke, 2012), and flood immunity myths (Cook, 2018). In addition, much of the research into resilience has been implemented in planning for climate resilience (Brage & Leardini, 2018), water sensitive design (Zaman & Chowdhooree, 2022), and restoring ecological infrastructure (Warner, 2011). In many ways, resilience is a direct response to pressing concerns (in this case, the flooding of the Brisbane River), but also characterises the importance of place in definitions, as well as highlighting the complexity associated with the term. Bohensky and Leitch (2014), for example, show that media coverage reinforced characteristics of resilience by recognising self-reliance, community spirit, and shared experiences for learning, as well as enunciating the role of climate change in increased risks of extreme events and trade-offs in planning. They also highlight that media discourse may constrain resilience through political opportunity and blame, as well as not paying heed to longer-term aspects. In addition, Cook (2018) highlights the myth “it will never happen again” from the 2011 floods, which was quickly dispelled by the more recent 2022 floods. The example of the Brisbane River clearly illustrates the important role that “place” plays with “resilience,” with different sets of geographic characteristics (both physical and social) influencing the resilience of different locations, particularly in terms of responses.

As a researcher primarily focused on reconstructing past environments, I can see that time is also a central concept related to resilience. This is particularly true with restoration activities, through the provision of critical baseline data, gaining insight into past periods of extreme climate change and understanding tipping points, namely, how far a system can be pushed until it changes into a new state (in-built resilience). Research focused on peatland restoration clearly highlights the importance of resilience in restoration activities. Moss (2023) provides an overview of the importance of peatlands in an Australian context and highlights that peat contains a record (from inception), through palaeoecological and geochemical proxies, of environmental change and how this has influenced the state of the ecosystem. Similarly, Ramdzan et al. (2022, 2023) examine a similar phenomenon in the context of Southeast Asian peatlands, which provides insight into how peatland systems have altered over thousands of years, with a particular focus on drivers of change.

These drivers provide crucial information, including baseline data, that can underpin restoration efforts and more effectively utilise resources, as well as examining how resilient a system is to past periods of environmental change. This is particularly useful as it can support the extensive peatland restoration efforts currently being undertaken across Kalimantan and Sumatra by the Indonesian Government and the specific Peatland Restoration Agency (known as the BRG). Similar initiatives are being undertaken across the globe (see for example the United Nations Environmental Programs Global Peatland Assessment, https://www.unep.org/resources/global-peatlands-assessment-2022) and incorporate community wellbeing, sustainable economic production, and indigenous knowledge. Terzano et al. (2022) outline the critical importance of community participation in peatland restoration efforts, illustrating that utilising resilience as an effective management or policy tool requires a multidisciplinary approach, particularly in terms of bringing together the physical and social sciences and facilitating a deeper temporal perspective through palaeoenvironment research (incorporating palaeoecology, geochemistry, and archaeology).

As highlighted above, resilience is intimately linked to place and time, two key facets that are strongly integrated with geography. The case studies of flooding in Brisbane illustrate the importance of place while peatland restoration illuminates the value of time in utilising resilience as an effective management and/or policy tool. Although in both cases, place and time are vital for effective application of a resilience-based approach, I would argue that geography plays a seminal role in the development of resilience in academic discourse, as well as effectively translating it into responses, whether management or policy based. This is not only based on the innate significant of place and time in the discipline, but also the long history of geography examining key issues from both a physical and a human perspective. I also suggest that resilience could act as an important anchoring point to bring physical and human geographers together, and in collaboration with other disciplines to address the big challenges we are facing in the 21st century. With this vein, I strongly encourage submission of articles focused on resilience in the journal, whether this is critically examining the concept or applying it in a range of activities that cut across social and natural dimensions.

None.

No ethics approval or funding statement is associated with this commentary.

弹性——地点和时间的作用
“弹性”是一个越来越重要的术语,用来描述一个系统(无论是人类的还是自然的)应对不确定性和变化的能力。这个词在政策和学术话语中一直是对“可持续性”和“脆弱性”的补充,同时也被定位为对全球气候变化和自然灾害的回应(Achour等人,2015;Weichselgartner,凯尔曼,2015)。随着昆士兰科技大学(QUT)弹性中心的发展,这一概念的重要性对我来说变得越来越明显,该中心的发展是为了将来自机构内广泛学科的研究人员聚集在一起,促进与其他学术机构、政府和行业的合作,并提供以弹性为中心的多学科团队的发展能力。重点关注的领域是气候、社区、灾害基础设施和自然,这些领域与QUT的优势相匹配,并且具有高度的跨界性。我直接参与了昆士兰科技大学复原力中心(作为气候主题负责人),随着它的发展,我努力理解“复原力”的定义和实用性,以及地点和时间在理解这一概念中所起的作用。作为一名地理学家,我认为“地点”是“弹性”的核心组成部分,也就是说,一个系统的弹性,无论是自然的还是人类的,都与地点的地理特征直接相关。例如,布里斯班的弹性与其所处的位置直接相关。布里斯班河或Maiwar(这条河的土著名称)清楚地说明了这一点,通俗地说,它被称为“棕色蛇”(QUT[昆士兰科技大学]数字收藏,2024)。它的现代特征(自欧洲殖民以来)是由潮汐形成的,经历了广泛的城市化和疏浚,在过去的200年里,这些因素加在一起显著增加了沉积物负荷(ABC, 2017)。尽管有这些变化,布里斯班河在面对重大的土地利用和土地覆盖变化时仍然具有相对的弹性(Kemp等人,2015)。然而,在布里斯班河的背景下,21世纪对复原力的特殊挑战是洪水形式的灾害,如2011年1月和2022年2月的重大洪水事件。与这些事件相关的大量学术论述已经出现,重点是在媒体定义和更广泛的社区叙事的背景下构建洪水(博亨斯基&amp;Leitch, 2014),建立社区弹性(Hayes &amp;Goonetilleke, 2012)和洪水免疫神话(Cook, 2018)。此外,许多关于恢复力的研究已经在气候恢复力的规划中实施(Brage &amp;Leardini, 2018),水敏感设计(Zaman &amp;Chowdhooree, 2022)和恢复生态基础设施(Warner, 2011)。在许多方面,弹性是对紧迫问题的直接回应(在这种情况下,布里斯班河的洪水),但也体现了定义中地点的重要性,以及突出了与术语相关的复杂性。例如,Bohensky和Leitch(2014)表明,媒体报道通过承认自力更生、社区精神和分享学习经验,以及阐明气候变化在极端事件风险增加中的作用和规划中的权衡,增强了复原力的特征。他们还强调,媒体话语可能会通过政治机会和指责来限制复原力,而且没有注意到更长期的方面。此外,库克(2018)强调了2011年洪水“再也不会发生”的神话,这一神话很快就被最近的2022年洪水驱散了。布里斯班河的例子清楚地说明了“地点”对“复原力”的重要作用,不同的地理特征(自然和社会)影响不同地点的复原力,特别是在应对措施方面。作为一名主要专注于重建过去环境的研究人员,我可以看到时间也是与弹性相关的一个核心概念。在恢复活动中尤其如此,通过提供关键的基线数据,深入了解过去极端气候变化的时期,并了解临界点,即系统在进入新状态(内置恢复力)之前可以被推动多远。针对泥炭地恢复的研究明确强调了恢复活动中恢复力的重要性。Moss(2023)概述了泥炭地在澳大利亚背景下的重要性,并强调泥炭包含了环境变化的记录(从一开始),通过古生态和地球化学代理,以及这如何影响生态系统的状态。同样,Ramdzan等人。 (2022, 2023)在东南亚泥炭地的背景下研究了类似的现象,它提供了对泥炭地系统如何在数千年中发生变化的见解,特别关注变化的驱动因素。这些驱动因素提供了关键信息,包括基线数据,这些信息可以支持恢复工作,更有效地利用资源,以及检查系统对过去环境变化时期的恢复能力。这是特别有用的,因为它可以支持印度尼西亚政府和具体的泥炭地恢复机构(称为BRG)目前在加里曼丹和苏门答腊岛开展的广泛的泥炭地恢复工作。类似的倡议正在全球范围内开展(例如,参见联合国环境规划署全球泥炭地评估,https://www.unep.org/resources/global-peatlands-assessment-2022),并将社区福祉、可持续经济生产和土著知识纳入其中。Terzano等人(2022)概述了社区参与泥炭地恢复工作的关键重要性,说明利用弹性作为有效的管理或政策工具需要多学科方法,特别是在将物理科学和社会科学结合起来,并通过古环境研究(结合古生态学、地球化学和考古学)促进更深层次的时间视角方面。如上所述,弹性与地点和时间密切相关,这两个关键方面与地理紧密结合。布里斯班洪水的案例研究说明了地点的重要性,而泥炭地的恢复说明了将弹性作为有效管理和/或政策工具的时间价值。尽管在这两种情况下,地点和时间对于有效应用基于弹性的方法至关重要,但我认为地理在弹性在学术话语中的发展中发挥着开创性的作用,并有效地将其转化为响应,无论是基于管理还是基于政策。这不仅基于地点和时间在学科中的固有意义,而且还基于地理学从物理和人文角度审视关键问题的悠久历史。我还建议,恢复力可以作为一个重要的支撑点,将自然地理学家和人文地理学家聚集在一起,并与其他学科合作,共同应对我们在21世纪面临的重大挑战。本着这种精神,我强烈鼓励在期刊上提交关于恢复力的文章,无论是批判性地审视这个概念,还是将其应用于跨越社会和自然维度的一系列活动中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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