2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.cities.2021.103206
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The dynamic development process of urban resilience: From the perspective of interaction and feedback

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Cited by 26 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…On the one hand, it is proposed in the wake of threats to the city, and on the other hand, it is proposed under the requirements of urban sustainability, aiming to improve the capacity of system services. Therefore, although there is some heterogeneity in definitions, there are correlations and similarities between them, and they are generally dynamic, malleable, and unbalanced (Li et al 2021 ). However, it is worth noting that the dynamic and fuzzy definition of urban resilience also challenges the transformation of resilience from a theoretical concept into practical urban intervention measures (Brand and Jax 2007 ; Wardekker et al 2020 ), which determines the difficulty of applying resilience into practice to some extent.…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…On the one hand, it is proposed in the wake of threats to the city, and on the other hand, it is proposed under the requirements of urban sustainability, aiming to improve the capacity of system services. Therefore, although there is some heterogeneity in definitions, there are correlations and similarities between them, and they are generally dynamic, malleable, and unbalanced (Li et al 2021 ). However, it is worth noting that the dynamic and fuzzy definition of urban resilience also challenges the transformation of resilience from a theoretical concept into practical urban intervention measures (Brand and Jax 2007 ; Wardekker et al 2020 ), which determines the difficulty of applying resilience into practice to some extent.…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Li et al ( 2020 ) established a SD model to clear the causal feedback and interaction mechanism among various components of urban resilience, and conducted an empirical study in Beijing. Li et al ( 2021 ) developed a SD model of urban resilience that pay more attention to the multidimensional and evolutionary characteristics, which provided a supplement for the quantitative assessment of urban resilience. Mou et al ( 2021 ) used the SD model to explore the internal mechanism of urban development, which promoted the construction of sustainable and resilient city.…”
Section: Urban Resilience Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In case of external interferences-under the joint action of internal and external organizations-the CLS will adjust its own structure, form, scale, function, input, and output, and form a system organization in line with the new environment through the reconstruction of the internal elements of its system; find a new development path to resist, absorb, and slow down the damage caused by interference; and continue to maintain the stable operation of the system. Resilience corresponds to transformation, which applies to the ability of any process in the framework of a social-ecological system to improve its own adaptability [3,4]. Therefore, in the face of crisis, the CLS abandons the original equilibrium state and takes the initiative to learn, adapt, and transform-showing resilience in the form of self-recovery and renewal, which can also be interpreted as 'social-ecological system resilience'.…”
Section: Definition Of the Connotationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the rise of physical resilience, the derivation of ecological resilience, and the sublimation of evolutionary resilience, the resilience theory has gone through a developmental process from the pursuit of a single equilibrium to the exchange of multiple equilibrium states, and finally to the abandonment of equilibrium and an emphasis on cross-scale dynamic interactions. Its connotation has evolved from an initial emphasis on the efficiency and speed of recovery to an emphasis on the ability to adapt and transform [3]. Under the social-ecological system, a resource system constantly adjusts its structure to adapt to external interferences and stimulation, reduce damage, and create new development paths by virtue of its self-regulation ability and external protection power-endowed by social and economic systems-so as to improve its ability of sustainable development, which can be understood as resilience.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The academic research on resilience has gone through three stages: physical resilience [7], ecological resilience [8], and evolutionary resilience [9,10], and the connotation has evolved from the initial emphasis on the efficiency and speed of recovery to the ability to adapt and transform [11]. In the evolutionary resilience phase of research, Walker et al (2004) suggested that resilience should not only be seen as a recovery of a system from its initial state, but as the ability of a complex social-ecological system to change, adapt, and transform in response to pressures and constraints [9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%