Measuring Resilience in the Assumed City
Wesley Cheek , Ksenia Chmutina
International Journal of Disaster Risk Science ›› 2022, Vol. 13 ›› Issue (3) : 317 -329.
Measuring Resilience in the Assumed City
The malleable nature of both the idea of a city and the idea of resilience raises an important question—why measure? Resilience is assumed to be located in the physical infrastructure of specific places or as a quality of the people located there. For disasters, we are often trying to conceptualize, measure, or render legible resilience in physical structures. But what is it that we are trying to measure, and is the idea of a city reflected in these measurements? If cities are organized around something other than resilience, is resilience their natural by-product? What is necessitating the need for increased—and measured—resilience? Using interpretive policy analysis, we explored five well known disaster resilience frameworks (UNDRR’s Making Cities Resilient Campaign, UN-Habitat’s City Resilience Profiling Programme, The World Bank and GFDRR’s Resilient Cities Program, Arup and The Rockefeller Foundation’s City Resilience Index, and The Rockefeller Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities) to identify the working definition of “city” and of “resilience.” We conclude that if the demand for cities to become more resilient is an acknowledgment of the risk produced by globalized urbanization, then the call itself is an indictment of the current state of our cities.
City planning and design / Disaster governance / Resilience frameworks / Urban theory
| [1] |
|
| [2] |
|
| [3] |
Arup. 2013. Resilient city index. https://www.arup.com/perspectives/publications/research/section/city-resilience-index. Accessed 6 Apr 2022. |
| [4] |
|
| [5] |
|
| [6] |
Bonilla, Y. 2020. The coloniality of disaster: Race, empire, and the temporal logics of emergency in Puerto Rico, USA. Political Geography 78: Article 102181. |
| [7] |
|
| [8] |
|
| [9] |
|
| [10] |
|
| [11] |
|
| [12] |
|
| [13] |
|
| [14] |
|
| [15] |
|
| [16] |
|
| [17] |
|
| [18] |
|
| [19] |
|
| [20] |
City of Berkeley. 2018. City of Berkeley demographic and economic profile. https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Manager/Economic_Development/Attachment3_DemographicandEconomicProfile.pdf. Accessed 5 Apr 2022. |
| [21] |
|
| [22] |
The Data Center. 2020. Who lives in New Orleans and Metro Parishes now? https://www.datacenterresearch.org/data-resources/who-lives-in-new-orleans-now/. Accessed 2 Feb 2022. |
| [23] |
Figueiredo, L., T. Honiden, and A. Schumann. 2018. Indicators for resilient cities. OECD Regional Development Working Papers 2018/02. https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/6f1f6065-en.pdf?expires=1590479668&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=0FB14A2A6B6E0368D2DA1E05ABECD310. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [24] |
Gaillard, J.C., and R. Jigyasu. 2016. Measurement and evidence: Whose resilience for whom? Resilience Development Institute Working paper No. 11. https://www.preventionweb.net/publication/measurement-and-evidence-whose-resilience-whom. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [25] |
|
| [26] |
|
| [27] |
|
| [28] |
Harvey, D. 1996. Cities or urbanization? City 1(1–2): 38–61. |
| [29] |
|
| [30] |
|
| [31] |
|
| [32] |
|
| [33] |
|
| [34] |
Levine, S. 2014. Assessing resilience: Why quantification misses the point. ODI Working Paper. London: Humanitarian Policy Group, Overseas Development Institute. https://odi.org/en/publications/assessing-resilience-why-quantification-misses-the-point/. Accessed 2 Feb 2022. |
| [35] |
|
| [36] |
|
| [37] |
|
| [38] |
Marx, C., and F. Engels. 1848 (2015 edn.). The communist manifesto. London: Penguin Classics. |
| [39] |
|
| [40] |
|
| [41] |
Merriam-Webster. n.d. Dictionary by Merriam-Webster: America’s most-trusted online dictionary. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/city. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [42] |
|
| [43] |
|
| [44] |
Morrison, S. 2020. An address by the Prime Minister of Australia, 14 January 2020. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuvPg-9ivoI. Accessed 5 Apr 2022. |
| [45] |
Obama, B. 2015. Remarks by the president on the ten year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. The White House, 27 August 2015. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2015/08/28/remarks-president-ten-year-anniversary-hurricane-katrina. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [46] |
|
| [47] |
|
| [48] |
|
| [49] |
|
| [50] |
|
| [51] |
|
| [52] |
|
| [53] |
The Rockefeller Foundation. 2013. 100 resilient cities. https://www.arup.com/perspectives/publications/research/section/city-resilience-index. Accessed 6 Apr 2022. |
| [54] |
The Rockefeller Foundation. 2016. 100 resilient cities and The Rockefeller Foundation announce 37 new member cities, reaching 100 city milestone for its global network. New York: Rockefeller Found. https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/news/100-resilient-cities-rockefeller-foundation-announce-37-new-member-cities-reaching-100-city-milestone-global-network/. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [55] |
|
| [56] |
Rogers, P. 2015. Researching resilience: An agenda for change. Resilience: International Policies, Practices and Discourses 3(1): 55–71. |
| [57] |
|
| [58] |
|
| [59] |
|
| [60] |
|
| [61] |
|
| [62] |
Schwartz, J., and M. Schleifstein. 2018. Fortified but still in peril, New Orleans braces for its future. The New York Times, 24 February 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/02/24/us/new-orleans-flood-walls-hurricanes.html, https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/02/24/us/new-orleans-flood-walls-hurricanes.html. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [63] |
|
| [64] |
|
| [65] |
|
| [66] |
UNDRR (United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction). 2010. Making cities resilient campaign. https://www.undrr.org/publication/making-cities-resilient-my-city-getting-ready-campaign-kit. Accessed 5 Apr 2022. |
| [67] |
UN-Habitat: United Nations Human Settlements Programme. 2018. City resilience profiling programme. https://unhabitat.org/guide-to-the-city-resilience-profiling-tool. Accessed 5 Apr 2022. |
| [68] |
US Census Bureau. 2019. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: New York City, New York.. https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/newyorkcitynewyork. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [69] |
|
| [70] |
|
| [71] |
Wakefield, S., D. Chandler, and K. Grove. 2021. The asymmetrical anthropocene: Resilience and the limits of posthumanism. Cultural Geographies. July 2021. https://doi.org/10.1177/14744740211029278. |
| [72] |
Wang, Y., D. Hulse, J. von Meding, M. Brown, and L. Dedenbach. 2020. Conceiving resilience: Lexical shifts and proximal meanings in the human-centered natural and built environment literature from 1990 to 2018. Developments in the Built Environment 1: Article 100003 |
| [73] |
Wikipedia. 2022. City. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City. Accessed 19 Mar 2022. |
| [74] |
Williams, N.E. 2020. Katrina battered Black New Orleans. Then the recovery did it again. Washington Post, 28 August 2020. https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/katrina-battered-black-new-orleans-then-the-recovery-did-it-again/2020/08/27/193d2420-e7eb-11ea-bc79-834454439a44_story.html. Accessed 14 Feb 2022. |
| [75] |
World Bank and Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery. 2006. Resilient cities program. https://www.gfdrr.org/en/resilient-cities. Accessed 5 Apr 2022. |
| [76] |
|
/
| 〈 |
|
〉 |