CCPortal
DOI10.1002/wcc.762
Power in resilience and resilience's power in climate change scholarship
Garcia, Alicea; Gonda, Noemi; Atkins, Ed; Godden, Naomi Joy; Henrique, Karen Paiva; Parsons, Meg; Tschakert, Petra; Ziervogel, Gina
发表日期2022
ISSN1757-7780
EISSN1757-7799
卷号13期号:3页码:21
英文摘要Resilience thinking has undergone profound theoretical developments in recent decades, moving to characterize resilience as a socio-natural process that requires constant negotiation between a range of actors and institutions. Fundamental to this understanding has been a growing acknowledgment of the role of power in shaping resilience capacities and politics across cultural and geographic contexts. This review article draws on a critical content analysis, applied to a systematic review of recent resilience literature to examine how scholarship has embraced nuanced conceptualizations of how power operates in resilience efforts, to move away from framings that risk reinforcing patterns of marginalization. Advancing a framework inspired by feminist theory and feminist political ecology, we analyze how recent work has presented, documented, and conceptualized how resilience intersects with patterns of inequity. In doing so, we illuminate the importance of knowledge, scale, and subject-making in understanding the complex ways in which power and resilience become interlinked. We illustrate how overlooking such complexity may have serious consequences for how socio-natural challenges and solutions are framed in resilience scholarship and, in turn, how resilience is planned and enacted in practice. Finally, we highlight how recent scholarship is advancing the understandings necessary to make sense of the shifting, contested, and power-laden nature of resilience. Paying attention to, and building on, such complexity will allow scholarly work to illuminate the ways in which resilience is negotiated within inequitable processes and to address the marginalization of those continuing to bear the brunt of the climate crisis. This article is categorized under: Climate and Development > Social Justice and the Politics of Development
英文关键词knowledge; power; resilience; scale; subject making
学科领域Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
语种英语
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WOS记录号WOS:000744871000001
来源期刊WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/272918
作者单位University of Western Australia; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; University of Bristol; Edith Cowan University; University of Amsterdam; University of Auckland; University of Cape Town
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Garcia, Alicea,Gonda, Noemi,Atkins, Ed,et al. Power in resilience and resilience's power in climate change scholarship[J],2022,13(3):21.
APA Garcia, Alicea.,Gonda, Noemi.,Atkins, Ed.,Godden, Naomi Joy.,Henrique, Karen Paiva.,...&Ziervogel, Gina.(2022).Power in resilience and resilience's power in climate change scholarship.WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE,13(3),21.
MLA Garcia, Alicea,et al."Power in resilience and resilience's power in climate change scholarship".WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE 13.3(2022):21.
条目包含的文件
条目无相关文件。
个性服务
推荐该条目
保存到收藏夹
导出为Endnote文件
谷歌学术
谷歌学术中相似的文章
[Garcia, Alicea]的文章
[Gonda, Noemi]的文章
[Atkins, Ed]的文章
百度学术
百度学术中相似的文章
[Garcia, Alicea]的文章
[Gonda, Noemi]的文章
[Atkins, Ed]的文章
必应学术
必应学术中相似的文章
[Garcia, Alicea]的文章
[Gonda, Noemi]的文章
[Atkins, Ed]的文章
相关权益政策
暂无数据
收藏/分享

除非特别说明,本系统中所有内容都受版权保护,并保留所有权利。