“…In recent years, there has been a growing number of studies on livelihood resilience, with research expanding and focusing on concepts [13][14][15], evaluations [16][17][18], influencing factors [19][20][21][22], and adaptive strategies [23][24][25][26]. Most international research has focused on livelihood resilience under disturbances such as natural disasters [27][28][29], climate change [30][31][32][33], food security [34,35], and policy changes [36,37]. Domestic scholars have primarily concentrated on three aspects: (1) empirical studies of livelihood resilience in poverty-stricken, ecologically vulnerable, and tourist regions, taking the perspective of household families and constructing a resilience framework [38,39]; (2) connecting livelihood resilience with poverty alleviation, resettlement, and urbanization, and using resilience improvement to achieve poverty reduction and strengthen migration outcomes [40,41]; and (3) analyzing the spatial relationships of livelihood resilience from a spatial perspective [42][43][44].…”