2019

Doorn, Neelke; Gardoni, Paolo; Murphy, Colleen
A multidisciplinary definition and evaluation of resilience: the role of social justice in defining resilience Journal Article
In: Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 112–123, 2019, ISSN: 2378-9697.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: capability approach, critical infrastructures, disasters, engineering, natural hazards, philosophy, risk, social justice, well-being
@article{Doorn2018,
title = {A multidisciplinary definition and evaluation of resilience: the role of social justice in defining resilience},
author = {Neelke Doorn and Paolo Gardoni and Colleen Murphy},
url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=4887867, SSRN},
doi = {10.1080/23789689.2018.1428162},
issn = {2378-9697},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-07-03},
urldate = {2019-07-03},
journal = {Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure},
volume = {4},
number = {3},
pages = {112--123},
publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
abstract = {This paper aims to explore how insights from the philosophical and social science literature can be incorporated into the definition of resilient infrastructure so that considerations of social justice can be accounted for and addressed more adequately. Building on the view that engineering ultimately aims to promote societal well-being, this paper argues that human well-being depends on (1) the resilience of the physical infrastructure and (2) the socioeconomic context, both of which in turn affect (i) how the impact and recovery of the physical infrastructure translates into societal impact and recovery and (ii) the ability of individuals to recover/adapt independently from the recovery of the physical infrastructure. The paper suggests that a capability approach may be a suitable framework for providing content to the formal concept of resilience as a capability approach is especially suitable for expressing non-tangible damage that might be caused by natural hazards and disasters.},
keywords = {capability approach, critical infrastructures, disasters, engineering, natural hazards, philosophy, risk, social justice, well-being},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
This paper aims to explore how insights from the philosophical and social science literature can be incorporated into the definition of resilient infrastructure so that considerations of social justice can be accounted for and addressed more adequately. Building on the view that engineering ultimately aims to promote societal well-being, this paper argues that human well-being depends on (1) the resilience of the physical infrastructure and (2) the socioeconomic context, both of which in turn affect (i) how the impact and recovery of the physical infrastructure translates into societal impact and recovery and (ii) the ability of individuals to recover/adapt independently from the recovery of the physical infrastructure. The paper suggests that a capability approach may be a suitable framework for providing content to the formal concept of resilience as a capability approach is especially suitable for expressing non-tangible damage that might be caused by natural hazards and disasters.
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