[ECO]systems of resilience practices : contributions for sustainability and climate change adaptation /

"Ecosystems of Resilience Practices: Contributions for Sustainability and Climate Change Adaptation focuses on resilience in action by exploring and providing approaches, perspectives, toolboxes, and theoretical discourses for the improvement and enhancement of territorial and community resilie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: ScienceDirect (Online service)
Other Authors: Colucci, Angela (Editor), Pesaro, Giulia (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam, Netherlands : Elsevier, [2022]
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Front Cover
  • [ECO]systems of Resilience Practices
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • List of contributors
  • Foreword: Rethinking resilience practices before and after the Covid-19 crisis
  • The mutual benefit for the well-being of nature and human
  • Introduction: Resilience, climate change, and sustainability in practice from approaches to action
  • 1 Resilience in action
  • 1.1 Resilience in action: [eco]systems of practices
  • 2 [Eco]system of resilience practices
  • References
  • I. Resilience practices: challenges and emerging issues
  • 1 Collaborative agency and sensitive design for social resilience
  • 1.1 Social resilience: innovating social frameworks in the neoliberal era
  • 1.2 Collaborative agency as the condition of resilient practice
  • 1.3 Sensitive design and digital tools for supporting social resilience
  • 1.3.1 Universal design principles
  • 1.3.1.1 Equitable use
  • 1.3.1.2 Flexibility in use
  • 1.3.1.3 Simple and intuitive use
  • 1.3.1.4 Perceptible information
  • 1.3.1.5 Tolerance for error
  • 1.3.1.6 Low physical effort
  • 1.3.1.7 Size and space for approach and use
  • 1.4 Conclusion
  • References
  • 2 Investment, risk, and vulnerability: perspectives in adaptation and risk finance
  • 2.1 Introduction and methods
  • 2.2 Addressing resilience in finance: the basic dimensions
  • 2.2.1 Vulnerability
  • 2.2.2 Risk
  • 2.2.3 Adaptation objectives
  • 2.3 Financial considerations on risk and vulnerability
  • 2.4 Sustainable finance and adaptation targets: in search of consistency
  • 2.5 Preliminary conclusions and open issues
  • References
  • 3 Resilience stabilization: the role of economic issues in resilience practices
  • 3.1 Toward an operational concept of economic resilience for territorial and community development.
  • 3.2 Strengthening the role of economic thinking and tools in territorial resilience practices and the economic resilience o...
  • References
  • Further reading
  • II. Resilience practices observatory project
  • 4 Fostering resilience in local communities: the role of Fondazione Cariplo
  • Reference
  • 5 Resilience practices observatory project: emerging phenomena and lessons earned
  • 5.1 The Italian Resilience Practices Observatory
  • 5.1.1 Resilience Practices Observatory: the project
  • 5.1.2 Resilience Practices Observatory: the aims
  • 5.1.3 Resilience Practices Observatory: activity domains
  • 5.2 The Resilience Practices Forum and the knowledge coproduction activities
  • 5.2.1 Resilience Practices Forums
  • 5.2.2 Resilience Practices Observatory Congress and coproduction activities
  • 5.3 Exploring the resilience practices observatory practices
  • 5.3.1 Resilience practices database
  • 5.3.1.1 Defining resilience practices and databases
  • 5.3.2 Resilience practices: sources and typologies of practices
  • 5.3.2.1 Resilience practices typologies
  • 5.3.3 Resilience practices: geographies and scales of action and benefits
  • 5.3.3.1 Geographical distribution
  • 5.3.4 Resilience practices: the governance models
  • 5.3.4.1 Actors and partnerships
  • 5.3.4.2 The Governance processes
  • 5.3.4.3 The stabilization and upscaling of processes
  • 5.3.4.4 Beneficiaries and targets of resilience practices
  • 5.3.5 Criticalities, topics, and tools
  • 5.3.5.1 The critical issues: levers for activation
  • 5.3.5.2 Core-topic clusters
  • 5.3.5.3 Tools for action domains
  • Acknowledgments and Attribution
  • References
  • 6 Monitoring the Fondazione Cariplo Resilient Communities practices
  • 6.1 Introduction
  • 6.2 The evaluation of resilient practices for territorial systems
  • 6.2.1 The theoretical and methodological characters.
  • 6.2.2 The application characters
  • 6.3 Outcomes and considerations of resilient practices monitoring
  • 6.3.1 The characteristics of resilience practices
  • 6.3.2 The assessment of the potential and real effectiveness of resilience practices
  • 6.3.3 The assessment of the overall impact of resilience practices on reference systems
  • 6.3.4 The assessment of the impact of single resilience practices on related reference systems
  • References
  • 7 The impacts of resilience practices on local food systems: evidences from Italian case studies
  • 7.1 Introduction
  • 7.2 Agro-environmental practices for resilience
  • 7.3 Materials and methods
  • 7.4 Results and discussion
  • 7.4.1 Criticalities
  • 7.4.2 Successful elements
  • 7.4.3 Obstacles
  • 7.4.4 Solutions
  • 7.4.5 Unexpected impacts
  • 7.4.6 Discussion
  • 7.5 Conclusions
  • References
  • 8 Resilience Practices Observatory project: synergies for stabilization and upscaling
  • 8.1 Enabling capacities for stabilization
  • 8.2 Knowledge hybridization
  • 8.3 Ecosystem of practices: networking and governance process of Resilience Practices Observatory practices
  • 8.4 Economical stabilization sustainability and independency
  • 8.5 Resilience Practices Observatory: contribution to resilience enhancement
  • Attribution
  • References
  • III. Exploring resilience practices
  • 9 Challenging resilience of the agroecosystems in the Agro Pontino: focusing on ecosystem services and land stewardship in ...
  • 9.1 Challenging resilience in an intensive agricultural environment
  • 9.1.1 The Agro Pontino ecological network approach
  • 9.1.2 Combining initiatives and building a resilience-based governance for the agroecosystems
  • 9.2 Engaging actors for biodiversity in agriculture: the pact for biodiversity
  • 9.2.1 Ecosystem services assessment supporting decision-making.
  • 9.2.2 Supporting the "guardian farmers": the land stewardship agreements
  • 9.3 A perfect recipe, what's missing?
  • References
  • 10 Toward a framework for assessing urban resilience. Application to a case study in Lyon (France)
  • 10.1 Introduction
  • 10.2 A collective intelligence tool for territorial resilience: the resilience framework
  • 10.2.1 Designing a tool for collective intelligence and analysis of the resilience of an area or development work
  • 10.2.1.1 Empirical construction of the framework
  • 10.2.1.2 The six levers of resilience
  • 10.2.2 Methodology for using the resilience framework
  • 10.2.2.1 Ex post: discussion, assigning points, and revealing forgotten issues
  • 10.2.2.2 Ex ante: laying the foundations for a resilience strategy
  • 10.3 The resilience of Place de Francfort in Lyon: an integrated approach, diverse stakeholders, and disaster risk reduction
  • 10.3.1 Place de Francfort: a gateway to Lyon's metropolitan area with high urban challenges
  • 10.3.2 Innovative developments to adapt to climate change
  • 10.3.3 The development Place de Francfort: relatively well-reconciled objectives
  • 10.4 Conclusion
  • References
  • 11 When the community takes action: building resilience through the Transition Movement in Spain. A critical assessment
  • 11.1 Introduction
  • 11.2 Preliminaries
  • 11.2.1 Socio-ecological movements background in Spain
  • 11.2.2 The birth of Transition Movement in Spain
  • 11.3 Current status of transition initiatives in Spain
  • 11.3.1 General retrospective since 2014
  • 11.3.2 Nature and evolution of the initiatives
  • 11.4 Challenges and opportunities of Transition Movement
  • 11.5 New trends
  • 11.6 Closing remarks
  • References
  • 12 Resilience and conservation of urban commons: lessons from three community-restored lakes in Bengaluru
  • 12.1 Introduction.
  • 12.2 Community restoration of three lakes in Bengaluru: Kaikondrahalli, Jakkur, and Puttenahalli
  • 12.3 Restored lakes as nodes of environmental placemaking
  • 12.4 Conclusions
  • Acknowledgments
  • References
  • 13 Beyond formal urban policies: resilient periurban alternative practices in the Amazon
  • 13.1 Introduction
  • 13.2 Mismatches of peripheral urbanization in Brazil
  • 13.3 The case of Belém
  • 13.4 Final remarks
  • References
  • Further reading
  • IV. Perspectives in boosting practices' contribution towards sustainability, adaptation and resilience
  • 14 Toolboxes for improving the stabilization of the resilience practices
  • 14.1 Enhance the diffusion and duration of resilience practices. Tools typologies for enhancing the achievement of resilien...
  • 14.1.1 Tools and resilience goals
  • 14.1.2 Tools and resilience actors
  • 14.1.3 Tools and resilience stabilization
  • 14.2 Instruction, education, and training tools
  • 14.3 Economic and financial-based tools
  • 14.4 Monitoring, measurement, and evaluation tools
  • 14.5 Tools for the enhancement of direct participation, communication, and diffusion of information on resilience action an...
  • 14.6 Learning from practices and back to action-the role of tools
  • References
  • Further reading
  • 15 Creative diversity: facing Anthropocene challenges fostering resilience capacities
  • 15.1 Enabling capacities: proprieties from resilience approaches
  • 15.2 Creative diversity: property for adaptive cities
  • 15.3 Creative diversity for our common futures: resilience in public life
  • 15.4 Creative diversity: actions domains for adaptive cities
  • 15.4.1 Space for nature: ecological biodiversity and human-natural health and well-being
  • 15.4.2 Spaces for social diversity and innovation
  • 15.4.3 Functional creative diversity: economic and urban models innovation.