The resilience concept has become more significant in the past decade as a means for understanding how cities prepare and plan for, absorb, recover from, and more successfully adapt to adverse events. Definitional differences—resilience as an outcome or end-point versus resilience as a process of building capacity—dominate the literature. Lagging behind are efforts to systematically measure resilience to produce a baseline and subsequent monitoring, in order to gauge what, where, and how intervention or mitigation strategies would strengthen or weaken urban resilience. The chapter reviews research and practitioner attempts to develop urban informatics for resilience and provides selected case studies of cities as exemplars.
CITATION STYLE
Cutter, S. L. (2021). Urban Risks and Resilience. In Urban Book Series (pp. 197–211). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-8983-6_13
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