Abstract
Drawing on, and integrating, emerging theories and practices of urban resilience, this article charts the emergence and progression of different 'waves' of resilience policy in the UK. Specifically, it argues that changing practices of resilience have emerged both as a function of time, and in relation to a range of changing socio-political and economic pressures, which have re-articulated the meaning, scale, operational role of, and responsibility for, resilience. The article seeks to critique resilience policy, raising questions about the usefulness of emerging resilience as the central organising concept for depicting how urban systems respond to contemporary and future crises. © 2013 Political Studies Association.
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Coaffee, J. (2013). Rescaling and responsibilising the politics of urban resilience: From national security to local place-making. Politics, 33(4), 240–252. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9256.12011
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