43 results on '"local resilience"'
Search Results
2. Mapping the Frontier: A Bibliometric Analysis of Artificial Intelligence Applications in Local and Regional Studies.
- Author
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Delcea, Camelia, Nica, Ionuț, Ionescu, Ștefan, Cibu, Bianca, and Țibrea, Horațiu
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *MACHINE learning , *REGIONAL development , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *DEEP learning - Abstract
This study aims to provide a comprehensive bibliometric analysis covering the common areas between artificial intelligence (AI) applications and research focused on local or regional contexts. The analysis covers the period between the year 2002 and the year 2023, utilizing data sourced from the Web of Science database. Employing the Bibliometrix package within RStudio and VOSviewer software, the study identifies a significant increase in AI-related publications, with an annual growth rate of 22.67%. Notably, key journals such as Remote Sensing, PLOS ONE, and Sustainability rank among the top contributing sources. From the perspective of prominent contributing affiliations, institutions like Duy Tan University, Ton Duc Thang University, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences emerge as leading contributors, with Vietnam, Portugal, and China being the countries with the highest citation counts. Furthermore, a word cloud analysis is able to highlight the recurring keywords, including "model", "classification", "prediction", "logistic regression", "innovation", "performance", "random forest", "impact", "machine learning", "artificial intelligence", and "deep learning". The co-occurrence network analysis reveals five clusters, amongst them being "artificial neural network", "regional development", "climate change", "regional economy", "management", "technology", "risk", and "fuzzy inference system". Our findings support the fact that AI is increasingly employed to address complex regional challenges, such as resource management and urban planning. AI applications, including machine learning algorithms and neural networks, have become essential for optimizing processes and decision-making at the local level. The study concludes with the fact that while AI holds vast potential for transforming local and regional research, ongoing international collaboration and the development of adaptable AI models are essential for maximizing the benefits of these technologies. Such efforts will ensure the effective implementation of AI in diverse contexts, thereby supporting sustainable regional development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Identifying Critical Micro-infrastructures
- Author
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Grubesic, Tony H., Nelson, Jake R., Wei, Ran, Grubesic, Tony H., Nelson, Jake R., and Wei, Ran
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
4. Investigating the Dimensions of local resilience in the face of drought; Case study: Qaleganj City, Kerman Province
- Author
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Masoud Heydarvand, Alireza Estelaji, and Farideh Asadian
- Subjects
drought ,local resilience ,qaleganj city ,human capital ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
The occurrence of recent droughts in Iran and the severity of the damages indicate the continued vulnerability of urban and rural areas. Reducing the vulnerability of rural and urban residents by increasing the level of resilience and promoting flexibility against natural consequences such as drought can be one of the features of management, planning and development, which is possible by identifying factors influencing resilience. Since the goal of resilience is to control and reduce the effects and consequences of hazards and also to use these threats as opportunities, the present research was conducted with the aim of investigating and analyzing drought indicators in relation to local resilience in order to realize this issue. This research is applied in terms of purpose and descriptive-analytical in nature. The statistical population of Qaleganj City of Kerman province is 74.495 people. Based on Cochran's formula, the sample size was randomly estimated as 453 people and was divided among them according to the population of each section. Two library and field methods were used to collect the required data. In order to analyze the issue and prepare the questionnaire, a framework of drought indicators was selected and compiled in the form of 39 items and ten resilience indicators. The form and content validity of the questionnaire was confirmed by the group of specialists and experts, as well as the construct validity of the exploratory factor analysis. The total reliability was estimated by Cronbach's alpha as 0.89. The results show that human capital and social capital have the greatest impact on resilience against drought. Various socio-economic and social indicators are considered to be among the influencing factors on the local resilience of Qaleganj City. Dimensions of resilience with a rate of 0.41 have an effect on sustainable development. The resilience of Qalaganj community has a favorable situation compared to the overall resilience. Therefore, it is necessary to address the various and basic aspects of drought in order to make the public more tolerant of these events.
- Published
- 2024
5. Community-Centred Energy Planning: Within and beyond Administrative Borders.
- Author
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Costa, Valentina and Campanini, Federico
- Abstract
Since its introduction in 2008, the Covenant of Mayors (CoM) has helped municipalities meet EU Climate and Energy goals and thresholds through Sustainable Energy and Climate Action Planning (SECAP). The engagement of local communities holds particular significance for smaller municipalities, which can leverage collective strategies to mutually contribute to climate change mitigation efforts, thereby optimizing results. In the realm of communities, Renewable Energy Communities (REC) have emerged as a potential tool for SECAP implementation, but although they target common objectives and constitute subsequent steps of the same planning flow, their interaction is poor. This study aimed to investigate similar tools' integration by focusing on administrative and technical boundaries whose overlaps often hinder their interoperability. To this aim, the Italian framework was chosen due to the representation of its signatories in the CoM. Municipalities that have undertaken actions related to RECs within their Joint SECAPs have been compared through an analysis of the CoM datasets. Finally, two Italian case studies were selected to evaluate the impact of different territorial and institutional configurations on these initiatives, aiming to face climate change and achieve a green transition. This helped the authors propose practical recommendations and policy implications concerning this kind of community-centred energy planning solution as outlined in the concluding section. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. بررسی ابعاد تاب آوری محلی در مواجهه با خشک سالی؛ مطالعه موردی: شهرستان قلعه گنج استان کرمان.
- Author
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مسعود حیدروند, علیرضا استعلاجی, and فریده اسدیان
- Abstract
Copyright of Housing & Rural Environment is the property of Natural Disasters Research Institute (NDRI) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Karstic Aquifers and Climate Refugia: A Preliminary Outline History of Water-Management Strategy in Bronze and Iron Age Southeast Arabia
- Author
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Michel de Vreeze, Derek Kennet, and William M. Deadman
- Subjects
climate change ,aquifers ,south east arabia ,settlement change ,local resilience ,4.2ka event ,Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Prehistoric archaeology ,GN700-890 ,Paleontology ,QE701-760 - Abstract
This paper attempts to set out a preliminary narrative of changing water exploitation and settlement in Southeast Arabia from the Umm an-Nar period to the Iron Age, with a particular focus on the 4.2ka event. It argues for long-term cultural and adaptive trends that are only now becoming apparent and are relevant to understanding local adaptation strategies to climatic events such as the 4.2ka event. In setting out this narrative, we also aim to show the value of Southeast Arabian data to regional discussions relating to human adaptation to climate change. We argue that lower ground water availability related to aquifer structures would have been a problem for Bronze Age (Umm an-Nar) communities, in particular those living in Central Oman around the Hajar Mountains and would have affected settlement viability in certain climatic conditions, leading to decline in the number and size of settlements after c. 2000BC. We suggest that late Umm an-Nar (2200–2000BC) settlement and agricultural activity over-extended in this area, a development paralleled in Harappan and Mesopotamian communities. These changes would have affected already ancient traditions, for example in relation to the communal ritual monuments. By contrast, for the Northern Emirates karstic aquifers were a crucial factor supporting settlement continuity after the 4.2ka event, in particular in the western coastal areas of Ras al-Khaimah and the area around Dibba on the east coast. It is argued that the distribution of these aquifers is key to understanding the cultural and economic changes associated with the ensuing Wadi Suq period (2000–1600BC). Other processes strengthened the pattern, such as changing interregional exchange patterns and associated overland and maritime routes. By the Iron Age (starting c 1300 BC), it appears that rainfall patterns changed again and settlement density in Central Oman began once again to exceed that of the Northern Emirates. We suggest that this is at least partly linked to the resilience of local communities in dealing with another climate event (3.2ka event) that potentially necessitated the management of climatic patterns that may have included periods of higher and lower rainfall including irregular flooding. Whilst some of the ideas set out here are still quite speculative, they are set out in the belief that further understanding of these changing patterns is crucial for our understanding of long-term adaptation to climate change in this region.
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- 2024
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8. Mapping the Frontier: A Bibliometric Analysis of Artificial Intelligence Applications in Local and Regional Studies
- Author
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Camelia Delcea, Ionuț Nica, Ștefan Ionescu, Bianca Cibu, and Horațiu Țibrea
- Subjects
local development ,local economy ,local resilience ,regional development ,regional economy ,regional resilience ,Industrial engineering. Management engineering ,T55.4-60.8 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
This study aims to provide a comprehensive bibliometric analysis covering the common areas between artificial intelligence (AI) applications and research focused on local or regional contexts. The analysis covers the period between the year 2002 and the year 2023, utilizing data sourced from the Web of Science database. Employing the Bibliometrix package within RStudio and VOSviewer software, the study identifies a significant increase in AI-related publications, with an annual growth rate of 22.67%. Notably, key journals such as Remote Sensing, PLOS ONE, and Sustainability rank among the top contributing sources. From the perspective of prominent contributing affiliations, institutions like Duy Tan University, Ton Duc Thang University, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences emerge as leading contributors, with Vietnam, Portugal, and China being the countries with the highest citation counts. Furthermore, a word cloud analysis is able to highlight the recurring keywords, including “model”, “classification”, “prediction”, “logistic regression”, “innovation”, “performance”, “random forest”, “impact”, “machine learning”, “artificial intelligence”, and “deep learning”. The co-occurrence network analysis reveals five clusters, amongst them being “artificial neural network”, “regional development”, “climate change”, “regional economy”, “management”, “technology”, “risk”, and “fuzzy inference system”. Our findings support the fact that AI is increasingly employed to address complex regional challenges, such as resource management and urban planning. AI applications, including machine learning algorithms and neural networks, have become essential for optimizing processes and decision-making at the local level. The study concludes with the fact that while AI holds vast potential for transforming local and regional research, ongoing international collaboration and the development of adaptable AI models are essential for maximizing the benefits of these technologies. Such efforts will ensure the effective implementation of AI in diverse contexts, thereby supporting sustainable regional development.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. COOPERATIVE LINKS BETWEEN BUSINESSES IN THE CONTEXT OF LOCAL SYSTEM RESILIENCE. ACASE STUDY OF POLAND’S PERIPHERAL REGIONS
- Author
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Magdalena Anna Zwolińska-Ligaj and Danuta Guzal-Dec
- Subjects
local resilience ,smart village ,innovativeness ,entrepreneurship ,peripheral region ,Agricultural industries ,HD9000-9495 ,Agriculture - Abstract
his study investigates the extent and nature of cooperative links between businesses in the analysed administrative units (communes) in peripheral regions in terms of their effect on strengthening the resilience of local economy. Empirical research was carried out in 2018 in three peripheral regions of Poland on a sample of 240 entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurs participated in creating local (commune-level) supply chains while reporting connections with suppliers outside of local systems. Businesses analysed in this study played a key role in enhancing the diversity of local (commune-level) goods and services markets while time taking into account their customers’ requirements. Local cooperation promoted strengthening of the competitive edge of cooperating businesses, becoming a local resilience factor. The characteristics of cooperative links presented in the study revealed that the benefits of local cooperation were appreciated more often in the group of businesses with inferior conditions for running and growing a business. Local economic growth policies in peripheral regions should take into account the assumptions arising from the smart village concept. A vital component of these policies in the context of fostering local innovativeness is the focus on the possibility of stimulating cooperation processes within local business sectors. Such focus of local policies may be seen as aimed at enhancing the resilience of local socio-economic systems.
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- 2023
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10. COOPERATIVE LINKS BETWEEN BUSINESSES IN THE CONTEXT OF LOCAL SYSTEM RESILIENCE. A CASE STUDY OF POLAND'S PERIPHERAL REGIONS.
- Author
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ZWOLIŃSKA-LIGAJ, MAGDALENA ANNA and GUZAL-DEC, DANUTA JOLANTA
- Subjects
VILLAGES ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,COOPERATION - Abstract
Copyright of Annals of the Polish Association of Agricultural & Agribusiness Economists is the property of Polish Association of Agricultural & Agribusiness Economists and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. PLATSENS BETYDELSE FÖR LOKAL RESILIENS : En enkätundersökning på den svenska landsbygden
- Author
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Pettersson, Alva and Pettersson, Alva
- Abstract
As a consequence of urbanization and the resulting rural decline, rural aeras today face unique threats and risks. Despite this, there is little knowledge about the conditions of rural areas, especially in times of crisis. Meanwhile, local resilience can enable communities to withstand, adapt to, and recover from crisis and stresses, with local collaboration and community cohesion being the rural area’s greatest strengths. Something that previously been noted and thought to positively affect local resilience is place identity. This survey study thus aims to understand ther elationship between place identity and local resiliens among Swedish rural communities. Data was collected through surveys distributed to community centers in rural areas and analyzedusing descriptive analysis. The results indicate the place identity is a central factor in influencing rural communities’ ability to cope with crises. Strong emotional ties to the local area promote cohesion and collative action during crises. The study also highlights variations based on geographic location, with purely rural areas exhibiting higher levels of place identity and local resilience compared to more urbanized areas. These findings highlight the role of place identity in local resilience and emphasize the importance of not viewing rural areas as homogeneous.
- Published
- 2024
12. Transition product design. A framework proposal for a holistic approach to systemic design
- Author
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Mario Bisson, Stefania Palmieri, Alessandro Ianniello, and Luca Botta
- Subjects
design for transition ,social innovation ,design for the common good ,a consciousness of place ,local resilience ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
The Transition Design (TD) discipline is based on a design framework and methodology that prioritises social and environmental well-being and the goals of local resilience and radical changes in socio-technical contexts. Terry Irwin (2019) sees two aspects of TD as fundamental: the idea that entire societies will face a transition to sustainable futures and the realisation that this will entail changes at the systemic level. As part of the ongoing disciplinary debate, this contribution investigates the potential of new design drivers, such as territorial value and local resilience, linked to specific case studies that can be seen as best practices. The result is a theoretical framework of eight guidelines that aims to answer some of the TD process’s problems and model the requirements that can then be replicated.
- Published
- 2022
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13. TRANSITION PRODUCT DESIGN Una proposta di framework per un approccio olistico alla progettazione sistemica.
- Author
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Bisson, Mario, Palmieri, Stefania, Ianniello, Alessandro, and Botta, Luca
- Abstract
Copyright of Agathon: International Journal of Architecture, Art & Design is the property of DEMETRA CE.RI.MED and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Rethinking local resilience for extreme heat events.
- Author
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Richmond, John George and Hill, Rowena
- Subjects
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HEAT , *EXTREME weather , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *HEALTH services accessibility , *PUBLIC health , *EMERGENCY management , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *EMERGENCY medical services , *CLIMATE change , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
This study aims to provide insights into how local resilience structures in England can be leveraged to deliver a whole-of-society approach to managing a national response to extreme heat events during summer months. A communication based on the literature review of currently available research on health emergency response and extreme heat events in England. This communication draws insights from the authors' research programmes, which examined national-level public health emergency response during the COVID-19 pandemic and literature review of the latest available English research on health and extreme heat events. Periods of extreme heat are on the rise in England. Local resilience forums (LRFs), due to their multiagency nature, offer a shared situational awareness and understanding of the need in their local communities. Such information is critical to ensure messaging about heat risks and available resources are tailored to reach specific targeted groups within their communities. Scenario planning and adaptation efforts require a more local articulation which LRFs are well placed to manage. LRFs are well suited as key structures in the English emergency response to extreme heat events. We suggest that English public health and hospital organisations, working with community partners via the LRFs, must develop their thinking about pressures from adverse weather in the summer months. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
15. COVID-19: How community businesses in England struggled to respond to their communities' needs.
- Author
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Gardner, Mandy, Webber, Don J, Parry, Glenn, and Bradley, Peter
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SOCIAL support ,GOVERNMENT policy ,COVID-19 ,SOCIAL cohesion ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Economic policies tend to downplay social and community considerations in favour of market-led and business-focussed support. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the need for greater and deeper social cohesion and local social support networks while highlighting that an overreliance on market forces can create social problems at times of need. Community businesses (CBs) are not for profit organisations that provide services and produce goods where the profit (or surplus) is reinvested back into that community. This article explores why CBs in England responded in a variety of ways to the COVID-19 pandemic, assesses what government policy did to help and hinder their place-based operations, and explores the observed socioeconomics of their age-related volunteer staff churn. Some CBs were ravaged by the consequences of the pandemic and associated government policies with many becoming unsustainable, while others evolved and augmented their support for and services to their communities, thereby enhancing their community's resilience. We highlight how adjustments to government policies could enhance the sustainability of CBs, making them and the communities they serve more resilient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. ‘This is not a drill’: Police and partnership preparedness for consequences of the climate crisis.
- Author
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Lydon, David, Hallenberg, Katja, and Kapageorgiadou, Violeta
- Abstract
This scoping study investigates the state of preparedness of the police and their partners for the potential consequences of the climate crisis in a United Kingdom (UK) context. The research engaged participants at strategic, tactical and operational levels of planning and operations, and conducted a thematic analysis of qualitative data to identify key themes: climate change impacts; why the police should care; prioritisation and preparation; and enabling and impeding factors. The results suggest that the police and their partners may be ill-prepared for the gamut of possible consequences. Preparedness appears hampered by a narrow focus on legislated requirements, short-term planning, lack of funding and resources, and limited prescience. Recommendations are made for redefining planning parameters, strengthening central government engagement, amplifying awareness and understanding of trend analyses, prioritisation of ‘futures’ thinking, ethical considerations and collaborative preparedness. The study has implications for law, public policy and professional practice in the UK, and other global jurisdictions seeking to develop risk assessment processes and preparedness for the consequences of climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Procedimiento de gestión del riesgo por incendios forestales con enfoque de resiliencia.
- Author
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Hardy-Casado, Virginia, Vega-de la Cruz, Leudis Orlando, Velázquez-Zaldívar, Reynaldo, Vilariño Corella, Carlos Manuel, and Nieves Julbe, Any Flor
- Subjects
- *
FOREST fires , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *DISASTER resilience , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FOREST fire ecology , *FOREST fire prevention & control - Abstract
The objective of this work is to present the procedure for risk management from the local resilience approach is presented. The application of the procedure was developed for the case of risk due to forest fires in the Oscar Lucero locality of the Holguín municipality. Methods such as: analysis and synthesis, systemic-structural, interview surveys, matrices, and descriptive and inferential statistics tools were used. An analysis of social and ecological robustness, and of specific resilience, was also carried out, which allowed dynamizing the factors that contributed to the reduction of risk in the space studied. Through the results obtained during its application for five years, it was possible to introduce the resilience approach in practice and evaluate its relevance in the Holguin context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
18. Some Final Observations
- Author
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Smailes, Peter John, Griffin, Trevor Louis Charles, Argent, Neil Michael, Abu-Laban, Baha, Advisory board, Birkin, Mark, Advisory board, Poston, Jr., Dudley L., Advisory board, Stillwell, John, Advisory board, Wahl, Hans-Werner, Advisory board, Deeg, D.J.H., Advisory board, Smailes, Peter John, Griffin, Trevor Louis Charles, and Argent, Neil Michael
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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19. Urbanization and Poverty in Kinshasa: Thinking Beyond 2015 Millennium Development Goals
- Author
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Longondjo, Clement, Michalos, Alex C., Series editor, Andrews, Nathan, editor, Khalema, Nene Ernest, editor, and Assié-Lumumba, N'Dri T., editor
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- 2015
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20. Mikropol. Eller historien om det store i det små.
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Fallov, Mia Arp, Jørgensen, Anja, Tølbøll, Lene, and Nielsen, Rikke Skovgaard
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LOCAL culture ,ECONOMIC models ,METROPOLIS ,ECONOMIC development ,MATERIALS analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Dansk Sociologi is the property of Djøf Forlag and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
21. Resilience of perfect matchings and Hamiltonicity in random graph processes.
- Author
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Nenadov, Rajko, Steger, Angelika, and Trujić, Miloš
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RANDOM graphs ,STOCHASTIC processes ,HAMILTONIAN graph theory - Abstract
Let {Gi} be the random graph process: starting with an empty graph G0 with n vertices, in every step i ≥ 1 the graph Gi is formed by taking an edge chosen uniformly at random among the nonexisting ones and adding it to the graph Gi − 1. The classical "hitting‐time" result of Ajtai, Komlós, and Szemerédi, and independently Bollobás, states that asymptotically almost surely the graph becomes Hamiltonian as soon as the minimum degree reaches 2, that is if δ(Gi) ≥ 2 then Gi is Hamiltonian. We establish a resilience version of this result. In particular, we show that the random graph process almost surely creates a sequence of graphs such that for m≥(16+o(1))nlogn edges, the 2‐core of the graph Gm remains Hamiltonian even after an adversary removes (12−o(1))‐fraction of the edges incident to every vertex. A similar result is obtained for perfect matchings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Co-creating a desirable and resilient future for Lienz, Austria—a local case study in socio-economic scenario development.
- Author
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Meyer, Ina, Hama, Michiko, Jandl, Robert, Leitner, Markus, Keuschnig, Markus, Anders, Ivonne, Fritz, Oliver, Berthold, Helene, and Eder, Brigitte
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL resilience ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,DECISION support systems ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
The aim of this case study was to conduct a participatory approach to socio-economic scenario development in the city of Lienz (East Tyrol) and to suggest this process-oriented approach as an element of an integrated guiding and decision support tool for local resilience and risk management to policy makers, business leaders, and civil society. The paper takes a socio-economic perspective and describes the settings of the case study, the process, and approach taken for co-creating two distinct normative socio-economic scenario narratives for the city of Lienz: a desirable or resilient future and an undesirable or stagnant future. Results are presented as sector-specific scenario narratives. Matching the local scenario narratives with the global shared socio-economic pathways, it derives that local peculiarities such as population decline due to outmigration trends or decentralized manufacturing industry and educational institutions were judged to be critical factors in securing local resilience for a prospering future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Industry life cycles of a resource town in Finland – the case of Lieksa
- Author
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Halonen Maija, Kotilainen Juha, Tykkyläinen Markku, and Vatanen Eero
- Subjects
industry life cycles ,resource dependence ,local resilience ,employment ,regional policy ,forested areas ,finland ,Agriculture ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Suomalaisten resurssiperustaisten maaseutukuntien kehitykseen ovat vaikuttaneet keskeisesti paikallisten toimialojen elinkaaret. Tutkimuskohteessa havaitut viisi toisiinsa limittyvää sykliä ovat perustuneet paikallisiin luonnonvaroihin, tuotuja raakaaineita ja puolivalmisteita käyttävään teollisuuteen ja palvelujen tuotantoon. Teollisella kaudella yksittäisen elinkaaren pituus on lyhentynyt. Syklistä toiseen siirtymiseen ovat vaikuttaneet eritasoiset poliittiset ja taloudelliset uusiutumisvaiheet. Viime vuosikymmenten poliittiset interventiot eivät ole kyenneet kompensoimaan tutkitun resurssiperiferian heikkoa kilpailukykyä ja luomaan kestävää perustaa uusille aloille. Parhaiten muuttuviin markkinatilanteisiin on sopeutunut paikallisia luonnonvaroja jalostava metsäteollisuus
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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24. Local resilience of an almost spanning k‐cycle in random graphs.
- Author
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Škorić, Nemanja, Steger, Angelika, and Trujić, Miloš
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GRAPHIC methods ,GRAPH theory ,GEOMETRIC vertices ,MATHEMATICS ,LOGICAL prediction - Abstract
The famous Pósa‐Seymour conjecture, confirmed in 1998 by Komlós, Sárközy, and Szemerédi, states that for any k ≥ 2, every graph on n vertices with minimum degree kn/(k + 1) contains the kth power of a Hamilton cycle. We extend this result to a sparse random setting. We show that for every k ≥ 2 there exists C > 0 such that if p≥C(logn/n)1/k then w.h.p. every subgraph of a random graph Gn,p with minimum degree at least (k/(k + 1) + o(1))np, contains the kth power of a cycle on at least (1 − o(1))n vertices, improving upon the recent results of Noever and Steger for k = 2, as well as Allen, Böttcher, Ehrenmüller, and Taraz for k ≥ 3. Our result is almost best possible in three ways: for p ≪ n−1/k the random graph Gn,p w.h.p. does not contain the kth power of any long cycle; there exist subgraphs of Gn,p with minimum degree (k/(k + 1) + o(1))np and Ω(p−2) vertices not belonging to triangles; there exist subgraphs of Gn,p with minimum degree (k/(k + 1) − o(1))np which do not contain the kth power of a cycle on (1 − o(1))n vertices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Robust Hamiltonicity of random directed graphs.
- Author
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Ferber, Asaf, Nenadov, Rajko, Noever, Andreas, Peter, Ueli, and Škorić, Nemanja
- Subjects
- *
DIRECTED graphs , *HAMILTONIAN graph theory , *COMPLETE graphs , *ARBITRARY constants , *MONOTONE operators - Abstract
In his seminal paper from 1952 Dirac showed that the complete graph on n ≥ 3 vertices remains Hamiltonian even if we allow an adversary to remove ⌊ n / 2 ⌋ edges touching each vertex. In 1960 Ghouila–Houri obtained an analogue statement for digraphs by showing that every directed graph on n ≥ 3 vertices with minimum in- and out-degree at least n / 2 contains a directed Hamilton cycle. Both statements quantify the robustness of complete graphs (digraphs) with respect to the property of containing a Hamilton cycle. A natural way to generalize such results to arbitrary graphs (digraphs) is using the notion of local resilience . The local resilience of a graph (digraph) G with respect to a property P is the maximum number r such that G has the property P even if we allow an adversary to remove an r -fraction of (in- and out-going) edges touching each vertex. The theorems of Dirac and Ghouila–Houri state that the local resilience of the complete graph and digraph with respect to Hamiltonicity is 1/2. Recently, this statements have been generalized to random settings. Lee and Sudakov (2012) proved that the local resilience of a random graph with edge probability p = ω ( log n / n ) with respect to Hamiltonicity is 1 / 2 ± o ( 1 ) . For random directed graphs, Hefetz, Steger and Sudakov (2014) proved an analogue statement, but only for edge probability p = ω ( log n / n ) . In this paper we significantly improve their result to p = ω ( log 8 n / n ) , which is optimal up to the polylogarithmic factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Local lithological drivers of post-fire vegetation recovery and implications for fire-prone regions.
- Author
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Torres, João, Marques, Joana, Alves, Paulo, Costa, Hermenegildo, and Honrado, João
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *POST-fire forests , *ECOLOGICAL resilience , *BIOTIC communities , *GEODIVERSITY , *SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Local ecosystem resilience to fire disturbance can be influenced by multiple factors, from topography and climate, to fire history and pre-fire structure of biotic communities. Here we investigated the factors affecting post-fire recovery of scrub vegetation in areas under Mediterranean climate affected by frequent fires. We hypothesized that, under comparable climatic and topographic conditions, geological factors (with bedrock type as a proxy) would be at least as important as fire history in explaining patterns of post-fire recovery. We surveyed scrub vegetation in a mountain study area in Portugal, using a stratified random sampling scheme, with fire frequency, time since last fire, and bedrock type (granite vs. schist) as stratifying layers. Based on vegetation and plant community data from 40 plots, we analyzed total species richness and composition, and the relative abundance of functional groups defined on the basis of general (non fire-specific) life-history traits. We found that, at a local scale, lithology can override fire history in determining post-fire recovery. Vegetation plots on granite exhibited a considerable development of tall scrubs and higher values of total species richness. They also hosted higher numbers of animal-dispersed woody species, of trees and tall scrubs, of woody deciduous species, and of forest, edge and tall scrub species. Differences in the post-fire development of scrub vegetation and in the functional profile of plant communities highlight the need to consider local geological diversity when establishing priorities for post-fire active restoration under scenarios of limited resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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27. Du bon usage du bocage : la haie bocagère au cœur des enjeux de développement durable
- Author
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Mathieu Douet and Frédérick Lemarchand
- Subjects
ecosystem services ,wood-energy ,ecological transition ,local resilience ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
The following proposition stands on a research elaborated for the Conseil départemental de la Manche which is focusing on dynamics of preservation/valorization of the bocage system in the department of Manche, France. Besides, this research is intertwined with a broader reflection undertaken by the territorial collectivity. Within a systemic and multidisciplinary approach, we have conducted a one-year investigation – comprising around fifty open interviews – in order to understand and analyze the social logics behind the organization of today’s bocage system while evaluating its agroecological and socioeconomical potentialities of valorization, particularly through the creation of a wood-energy sector as part of the future "energy mix".
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Transition product design. A framework proposal for a holistic approach to systemic design
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Bisson, M., Palmieri, S., Ianniello, A., and Botta, L.
- Subjects
design for transition, social innovation, design for the common good, a consciousness of place, local resilience ,a consciousness of place ,design for transition ,social innovation ,design for the common good ,local resilience - Published
- 2022
29. Re-embedding economies in ecologies: resilience building in more than human communities.
- Author
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Gibson-Graham, J.K., Hill, Ann, and Law, Lisa
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL resilience ,BUILT environment ,ENVIRONMENTAL ethics ,CLIMATE change ,ECONOMICS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,UTILITARIANISM - Abstract
The modern hyper-separation of economy from ecology has severed the ties that people have with environments and species that sustain life. A first step towards strengthening resilience at a human scale involves appreciating, caring for and repairing the longstanding ecological relationships that have supported life over the millennia. The capacity to appreciate these relationships has, however, been diminished by a utilitarian positioning of natural environments by economic science. Ecologists have gone further in capturing the interdependence of economies and ecologies with the concept of socio-ecological resilience. Of concern, however, is the persistence of a vision of an economy ordered by market determinations in which there is no role for ethical negotiation between humans and with the non-human world. This paper reframes economy–ecology relations, resituating humans within ecological communities and resituating non-humans in ethical terms. It advances the idea of community economies (as opposed to capitalist economies) and argues that these must be built if we are to sustain life in the Anthropocene. The argument is illustrated with reference to two construction projects situated in ‘Monsoon Asia’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Risque climatique et réactivité des populations urbaines vulnérabilisées face à la montée des eaux de mer à Gonzagueville, Abidjan (Côte d’Ivoire)
- Author
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Chérif Sadia
- Subjects
Côte d’Ivoire ,coast ,sea level rise ,local resilience ,Gonzagueville ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
From August, 24th to 26th 2011, sea rose to heights superior to 2 m causing damage to property and migration of populations of the coastal district of Gonzagueville in Abidjan. Press in Côte d’Ivoire raised the exclusive character of these events. But, they are connected to the global environmental changes which exercise an additional pressure on the coastal zone of port cities such Abidjan. The socio-spatial organization of the city of Abidjan highlights the vulnerability of the poor populations of Gonzagueville which occupy the coastal parts and are in the front line at the time of sea level rise. However, their capacity of reaction allows finding local solutions in the undergone phenomenon. To understand this process, informal inquiries were led with the victims of sea level rise of Gonzagueville coupled with direct observation and a local press review. As such, the resilience process of the victims of Gonzagueville declines in several phases follow-up of the expression of the generosity of the authorities towards them. Spontaneity of that form of resilience leads to a recurring exposure at the risk and is little effective in front of uncertainties in the assessment of risks connected to the nowadays global environmental changes. For that purpose, the article proposes rather the preventive resilience consisting of measures to prevent risks incurred by the Abidjan’s populations.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. An examination of local resilience against violent Islamic extremism in Sweden
- Author
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Östevik, Elise and Östevik, Elise
- Abstract
The following thesis seek to examine the area of resilience in the context of violent Islamic extremism in Sweden. Its goal is to probe a theoretical typology of resilience to explore its contribution to a more precise description of local resilience against violent Islamic extremism in Sweden. The aim is explored through the systematization of four resilience approaches believed to be useful in the context of violent extremism; the Homeostatic approach, the Autopoietic approach, the Micro-politics approach and the Civic approach. Local resilience is analyzed within a single case study by using nine interviews, national and local strategies against violent extremism as well as a grounded theory approach to qualitative data analysis. The research identifies that the most prominent factors perceived to characterize local resilience consist of work to promote democracy, human rights and equality. Another finding is that the systematization of the field can contribute to a clearer description of perceived characteristics and local resilience, enabling the realization of differences in resilience approaches and the division of them connected to different levels in society. Another finding is the potential difference in resilience perceptions which can be identified between actors forming strategies and actors implementing the same strategies.
- Published
- 2020
32. Risque climatique et réactivité des populations urbaines vulnérabilisées face à la montée des eaux de mer à Gonzagueville, Abidjan (Côte d’Ivoire).
- Author
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SADIA, CHÉRIF
- Abstract
Copyright of VertigO is the property of La Revue Electronique en Sciences de l'Environnement VertigO and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Resilience of perfect matchings and Hamiltonicity in random graph processes
- Author
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Angelika Steger, Rajko Nenadov, and Miloš Trujić
- Subjects
Random graph ,Sequence ,Mathematics::Combinatorics ,Degree (graph theory) ,Applied Mathematics ,General Mathematics ,010102 general mathematics ,Hitting time ,0102 computer and information sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Vertex (geometry) ,Hamiltonicity ,Local resilience ,Perfect matchings ,Random graphs ,Combinatorics ,010201 computation theory & mathematics ,FOS: Mathematics ,Mathematics - Combinatorics ,Almost surely ,Combinatorics (math.CO) ,0101 mathematics ,Null graph ,Software ,Hamiltonian (control theory) ,Mathematics - Abstract
Let $\{G_i\}$ be the random graph process: starting with an empty graph $G_0$ with $n$ vertices, in every step $i \geq 1$ the graph $G_i$ is formed by taking an edge chosen uniformly at random among the non-existing ones and adding it to the graph $G_{i - 1}$. The classical `hitting-time' result of Ajtai, Koml\'{o}s, and Szemer\'{e}di, and independently Bollob\'{a}s, states that asymptotically almost surely the graph becomes Hamiltonian as soon as the minimum degree reaches $2$, that is if $\delta(G_i) \ge 2$ then $G_i$ is Hamiltonian. We establish a resilience version of this result. In particular, we show that the random graph process almost surely creates a sequence of graphs such that for $m \geq (\tfrac{1}{6} + o(1))n\log n$ edges, the $2$-core of the graph $G_m$ remains Hamiltonian even after an adversary removes $(\tfrac{1}{2} - o(1))$-fraction of the edges incident to every vertex. A similar result is obtained for perfect matchings., Comment: 23 pages; small updates to the paper after anonymous reviewers' reports
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. ¿Ciudades en transición? Las nuevas dinámicas municipales y las transiciones ecosociales
- Author
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García Díaz, José Eduardo and García Díaz, José Eduardo
- Abstract
El libro Ciudades en movimiento recoge los logros y refleja las contradicciones presentes en las nuevas políticas municipales de España. También aporta una descripción de 200 actuaciones relacionadas con la transición ecosocial. En el texto podemos apreciar las dificultades que enfrentan los ayuntamientos cuando pretenden incrementar la resiliencia local. Los límites estructurales determinan que, en muchos casos, las acciones programadas tengan un mero carácter asistencial, sin llegar a producir cambios en profundidad en las dinámicas sociales en relación con problemas como el agotamiento de los recursos o el cambio climático., The book Ciudades en movimiento collects the achievements and reflects the contradictions in the new municipal policies of Spain. It also provides a description of 200 actions related to the eco-social transition. In the text, we can appreciate the difficulties faced by municipalities when they intend to increase local resilience. The structural limits determine that, in many cases, programmed actions have a purely palliative nature, without producing deep changes in social dynamics in relation to problems such as resource depletion or climate change.
- Published
- 2019
35. Robustness of Randomized Rumour Spreading
- Author
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Rami Daknama and Konstantinos Panagiotou and Simon Reisser, Daknama, Rami, Panagiotou, Konstantinos, Reisser, Simon, Rami Daknama and Konstantinos Panagiotou and Simon Reisser, Daknama, Rami, Panagiotou, Konstantinos, and Reisser, Simon
- Abstract
In this work we consider three well-studied broadcast protocols: push, pull and push&pull. A key property of all these models, which is also an important reason for their popularity, is that they are presumed to be very robust, since they are simple, randomized, and, crucially, do not utilize explicitly the global structure of the underlying graph. While sporadic results exist, there has been no systematic theoretical treatment quantifying the robustness of these models. Here we investigate this question with respect to two orthogonal aspects: (adversarial) modifications of the underlying graph and message transmission failures. We explore in particular the following notion of local resilience: beginning with a graph, we investigate up to which fraction of the edges an adversary may delete at each vertex, so that the protocols need significantly more rounds to broadcast the information. Our main findings establish a separation among the three models. On one hand pull is robust with respect to all parameters that we consider. On the other hand, push may slow down significantly, even if the adversary is allowed to modify the degrees of the vertices by an arbitrarily small positive fraction only. Finally, push&pull is robust when no message transmission failures are considered, otherwise it may be slowed down. On the technical side, we develop two novel methods for the analysis of randomized rumour spreading protocols. First, we exploit the notion of self-bounding functions to facilitate significantly the round-based analysis: we show that for any graph the variance of the growth of informed vertices is bounded by its expectation, so that concentration results follow immediately. Second, in order to control adversarial modifications of the graph we make use of a powerful tool from extremal graph theory, namely Szemerédi’s Regularity Lemma.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cities in transition? The new municipal dynamics and ecosocial transitions
- Author
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José Eduardo García Díaz
- Subjects
Municipal policy ,Crisis ecológica ,Sustainability ,Resiliencia local ,Ecosocial transition ,Local resilience ,Política municipal ,Ecological crisis ,Transición ecosocial ,Sostenibilidad - Abstract
espanolEl libro Ciudades en movimiento recoge los logros y refleja las contradicciones presentes en las nuevas politicas municipales de Espana. Tambien aporta una descripcion de 200 actuaciones relacionadas con la transicion ecosocial. En el texto podemos apreciar las dificultades que enfrentan los ayuntamientos cuando pretenden incrementar la resiliencia local. Los limites estructurales determinan que, en muchos casos, las acciones programadas tengan un mero caracter asistencial, sin llegar a producir cambios en profundidad en las dinamicas sociales en relacion con problemas como el agotamiento de los recursos o el cambio climatico. EnglishThe book Ciudades en movimiento collects the achievements and reflects the contradictions in the new municipal policies of Spain. It also provides a description of 200 actions related to the eco-social transition. In the text, we can appreciate the difficulties faced by municipalities when they intend to increase local resilience. The structural limits determine that, in many cases, programmed actions have a purely palliative nature, without producing deep changes in social dynamics in relation to problems such as resource depletion or climate change.
- Published
- 2019
37. Common stock as innovation enabling platforms
- Author
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LINO, Barbara and LINO, Barbara
- Subjects
cultural legacy ,Settore ICAR/21 - Urbanistica ,local resilience ,heritage - Abstract
The huge wealth of properties that we have built in many years in our cities and peripheries, convinced that it was capable of generating value, today is largely degraded, underused or disused but it represents a stock of heritage that could be fundamental to feed a dynamic and flexible view of legacy capable to influence our design culture. The challenge presented is how to shift the development asset from real estate capitalization to a knowledge economy where disused assets are offered as common stocks and enabling platforms for collective actions.
- Published
- 2019
38. Sharing within a city in crisis:Two ICTs-supported P2P economic networks in Thessaloniki, Northern Greece
- Author
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Eleni Margariti and Penny Travlou
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Open platform ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,alternative economy ,commons ,Participant observation ,local resilience ,Computer Science Applications ,Sharing economy ,Information and Communications Technology ,Political science ,ICTs ,p2p urbanism ,Regional science ,ICTS ,Psychological resilience ,open platforms ,Commons ,media_common - Abstract
The paper focuses on two emerging networks of sharing economy in Greece's second largest city, Thessaloniki: Trapeza Chronou, a time bank, and 'KOI.NO', a community-currency network, both supported by open platform information and communications technology (ICTs). These two networks are approached as tactics that have the potential to generate socioeconomic change through bottom-up participation and ICTs-supported citizen engagement. Both initiatives utilise open source ICTs to facilitate urban economic networking as means for enhancing local resilience, social inclusion and community self-management. Based on semi-structured interviews with network members and participant observation of the case studies, the paper discusses: a) the socio-economic and technical characteristic; b) the structure and governance of these networks; c) evaluates their potential as pathways to radical socioeconomic change.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Industry life cycles of a resource town in Finland – the case of Lieksa
- Author
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Markku Tykkyläinen, Juha Kotilainen, Maija Halonen, and Eero Vatanen
- Subjects
Resource dependence theory ,Resource (biology) ,Natural resource economics ,Geography, Planning and Development ,forested areas ,Social Sciences ,Agriculture ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,resource dependence ,local resilience ,Regional policy ,Economy ,employment ,finland ,industry life cycles ,Business ,regional policy ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The article aims to show how local industry life cycles impact the development of Finnish resource-based rural towns. This study reveals five long-term and overlapping industry cycles which were based on natural resources, assembly industries and service production. In general, the cycles have shortened over time. Transitions from cycle to cycle were enabled by the phases of resilience, which were highly dependent on political and economic processes at different scales. However, the political interventions of the last decades were unable to compensate for the disadvantages in competitiveness of this remote area and lay sustainable foundations for new industries. In the long run, the only exception has been the forest-related processing industry which has a capacity to renew its own operations and adapt to changing market situations. The results demonstrate the high significance of absolute advantage in rural development
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Japan: coastal communities, a tsunami is coming!
- Author
-
Basurto, Xavier, Yokoyama, Takafumi, and Ikeguchi, Akiko
- Subjects
ICSF ,livelihood ,Fisheries ,Environment ,coastal communities ,local resilience ,fishing communities ,Japan ,local fishers ,impact ,small scale fisheries ,tsunami ,history ,Samudra Report - Abstract
Local fishers played an important role in keeping rural coastal economies alive after the worst tsunami in Japan’s history.
- Published
- 2017
41. Du bon usage du bocage : la haie bocagère au cœur des enjeux de développement durable
- Author
-
Douet, Mathieu, Lemarchand, Frédérick, Centre d'étude et de recherche sur les risques et les vulnérabilités (CERREV), Université de Caen Normandie (UNICAEN), and Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU)
- Subjects
Ecological transition ,Bois-énergie ,[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studies ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,Wood-energy ,Résilience locale ,Ecosystem services ,Transition écologique ,Local resilience ,Services écosystémiques - Abstract
International audience; The following proposition stands on a research elaborated for the Conseil départemental de la Manche which is focusing on dynamics of preservation/valorization of the bocage system in the department of Manche, France. Besides, this research is intertwined with a broader reflection undertaken by the territorial collectivity. Within a systemic and multidisciplinary approach, we have conducted a one-year investigation – comprising around fifty open interviews – in order to understand and analyze the social logics behind the organization of today’s bocage system while evaluating its agroecological and socioeconomical potentialities of valorization, particularly through the creation of a wood-energy sector as part of the future "energy mix".; La présente proposition repose sur la réalisation d’une recherche pour le compte du Conseil départemental de la Manche portant sur les dynamiques de préservation/valorisation du système bocager manchois en lien avec une réflexion prospective plus globale engagée par cette collectivité territoriale. Dans le cadre d’une approche systémique et pluridisciplinaire, nous avons conduit une enquête d’un an – comptant une cinquantaine d’entretiens ouverts – afin de comprendre et analyser les logiques sociales qui sous-tendent l’organisation du système bocager actuel tout en évaluant ses potentialités de valorisation agro-écologiques, socio-économiques, et notamment par l’intermédiaire de la création d’une filière bois-énergie entrant dans le futur « mix énergétique ».
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The good use of the bocage system at the heart of sustainable development issues
- Author
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Mathieu Douet, Frédérick Lemarchand, Centre d'étude et de recherche sur les risques et les vulnérabilités (CERREV), Université de Caen Normandie (UNICAEN), and Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU)
- Subjects
050402 sociology ,Bois-énergie ,05 social sciences ,Résilience locale ,Transition écologique ,lcsh:G1-922 ,General Medicine ,résilience locale ,local resilience ,services écosystémiques ,0506 political science ,ecological transition ,bois-énergie ,wood-energy ,0504 sociology ,[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studies ,Political science ,transition écologique ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,050602 political science & public administration ,Services écosystémiques ,ecosystem services ,Humanities ,lcsh:Geography (General) - Abstract
International audience; The following proposition stands on a research elaborated for the Conseil départemental de la Manche which is focusing on dynamics of preservation/valorization of the bocage system in the department of Manche, France. Besides, this research is intertwined with a broader reflection undertaken by the territorial collectivity. Within a systemic and multidisciplinary approach, we have conducted a one-year investigation – comprising around fifty open interviews – in order to understand and analyze the social logics behind the organization of today’s bocage system while evaluating its agroecological and socioeconomical potentialities of valorization, particularly through the creation of a wood-energy sector as part of the future "energy mix".; La présente proposition repose sur la réalisation d’une recherche pour le compte du Conseil départemental de la Manche portant sur les dynamiques de préservation/valorisation du système bocager manchois en lien avec une réflexion prospective plus globale engagée par cette collectivité territoriale. Dans le cadre d’une approche systémique et pluridisciplinaire, nous avons conduit une enquête d’un an – comptant une cinquantaine d’entretiens ouverts – afin de comprendre et analyser les logiques sociales qui sous-tendent l’organisation du système bocager actuel tout en évaluant ses potentialités de valorisation agro-écologiques, socio-économiques, et notamment par l’intermédiaire de la création d’une filière bois-énergie entrant dans le futur « mix énergétique ».
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Examining the Influence of Community Institutions on Inner Ring Suburban Resilience: A Study in Southeastern Pennsylvania
- Subjects
Social Research ,Geography ,Festivals and Events ,Recreation Facilities ,Local Resilience ,Public Libraries ,Inner Ring Suburbs ,Area Planning and Development ,Community Connectivity - Abstract
Inner ring suburbs are vulnerable as they face continual downward pressure amidst increasingly complex post-industrial regional dynamics. Many suburban policymakers focus on housing and commercial development when considering ways to improve their localities through the built environment; they often overlook the potential benefits of community-oriented infrastructure -- namely public libraries, neighborhood recreation facilities, and community festivals/events -- as a catalyst for encouraging economic development and neighborhood social capital. This study asks whether inner ring suburbs that offer vibrant community institutions exhibit greater levels of resilience capacity than those with less vibrant community facilities. Across the country government officials target community institutions for service reduction and/or closure in high-profile proposals to balance budgets in a tight economy. In a number of high-profile urban library budget fights, community protestors cite their library's functions as a safe environment for children after school to socialize and study, a place for public internet access and engaging programming, and as the hub of the community. Such accounts offer a glimpse into the value of community institutions in the making of place. Suburbs are competing to gain and maintain their base of residents in a highly mobile and competitive environment. Tiebout (1956) theorizes that this ease of mobility allows people to act as consumers who choose the community package of services/amenities that best meets their budget and preferences. The group of community institutions at the center of this study - public libraries, parks and recreation facilities, and community festivals/events -- are part of a wider architecture of local community infrastructure that composes a community's package of services and amenities. Public schools are an important element of that community infrastructure and the one that is most often considered to add value to suburban localities. Although public schools are unquestionably a vital community institution, this dissertation challenges the narrative that school quality is the prime suburban value-generator by measuring the value to local resilience of school quality against the vibrancy of these other kinds of community institutions that may nurture community life in different ways. This work addresses three main gaps in the literature. Work measuring the value of, and understanding the effects of, community institutions in local places is scant. Studies linking resilience capacity to a place's institutional fabric often overlook public-oriented, taxpayer-funded, place-based facilities in favor of an emphasis on non-profit organizations. A regional approach with a focus on effects in inner ring suburbs is rare. Through a mixed methods approach utilizing exploratory data analysis and qualitative content analysis on the inner ring Pennsylvania suburbs surrounding Philadelphia, this research considers the effects of community institutions on each of three previously identified resilience components: economic strength, socio-demographic appeal, and community connectivity. Results suggest that townships with middling or low school quality may be supporting forms of community institutions other than public schools as a way to increase appeal when the schools alone are not a sufficient draw. Furthermore, townships possibly gain resilience value from promoting community institutions in an active way. Other findings shed new light on people-oriented approaches to inner ring suburban resilience and sustainable regional development that may be gaining relevance in the context of 21st century place dynamics.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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