Handbook on Resilience of Socio-Technical Systems 2019
DOI: 10.4337/9781786439376.00008
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The metaphorical processes in the history of the resilience notion and the rise of the ecosystem resilience theory

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The history of resilience as a psychological quality is the outcome of a chain of interdisciplinary transfer processes (Hellige, 2019, pp. 30–51).…”
Section: “Your Connection Is Too Weak Please Try Again”mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The history of resilience as a psychological quality is the outcome of a chain of interdisciplinary transfer processes (Hellige, 2019, pp. 30–51).…”
Section: “Your Connection Is Too Weak Please Try Again”mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To describe the behaviour of ecological systems within this proposed multi‐state reality, Holling adopted the notion of ‘resilience’, long used in the material sciences as well as in psychology and medicine (Hellige, 2018), (re)defining it as the capacity of a system to absorb change and thus persist within a given stability domain (Holling, 1973, 1985). Holling, although the first to propose a process model of multi‐equilibrium theory (which fuelled the rapid uptake of the resilience concept, Hellige, 2018), was not the first to propose resilience as a property of a multi‐equilibrium system. In fact, other ecologists, namely Errington (Errington, 1946; Errington et al., 1940), Person (1960) and May (1974), had presented similar postulations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the lack of empirical support for the multi‐state hypothesis, however, ecologists continued working on the assumption of a single equilibrium state (Folke, 2006), and early resilience studies focused on measuring or explaining the ability of an ecological system to maintain optimal function and recover to a pre‐disturbance state (Carpenter et al., 1992; Dayton et al., 1984; DeAngelis, 1980; DeAngelis et al., 1989; Harrison, 1979; Pimm, 1984). Holling dubbed this notion of resilience as the return time to equilibrium after disturbance engineering resilience (Hellige, 2018; Holling, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, en quelque sorte la résilience du niveau d'organisation le plus élevé et d'échelle planétaire 10 , à la différence que la résilience conduit au retour à l'équilibre initial, tandis que l'homéostasie mène à un nouvel équilibre, certes proche, mais tout de même différent du premier(Hellige, 2019). En mettant fortement en avant l'échelle mondiale de l'homéostasie, il se distinguait des biologistes et de son collègue polonais Trojan Przemysław(1980), qui employait ce concept pour quantité de communautés d'être vivants de niveau scalaire inférieur.…”
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