Resilience is generally considered the capacity to tolerate, absorb, cope with, and adjust to changing social or environmental conditions while retaining key elements of structure, function, and identity. The social dimensions of resilience are vital to understanding the impacts of environmental changes, such as climate change, on social-ecological systems. In this Primer, we introduce key social factors that provide resilience in linked social-ecological systems, including (1) assets, (2) flexibility, (3) social organization, (4) learning, (5) socio-cognitive constructs, and (6) agency. Emerging frontiers of resilience include applying social-ecological network approaches, investigating power relations, and exploring how transformative ver...
Climate change and its associated challenges may have an impact on people and communities. Studies p...
If resilience theory is to be of practical value for policy makers and resource managers, the theory...
More than two decades after E. E. Werner and R. S. Smith (1982), N. Garmezy (1983), and M. Rutter (1...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Resilience is the ability of a system to absorb dist...
In various scientific disciplines resilience has become a key concept for theoretical frameworks and...
This article defines social resilience as the ability of groups or communities to cope with external...
Resilience studies build on the notion that phenomena in the real world should be understood as dyna...
Resilience thinking addresses the dynamics and development of complex social-ecological systems (SES...
Adaptation is a process of deliberate change in anticipation of or in reaction to external stimuli a...
Resilience thinking has developed separately in the bodies of literature on social-ecological system...
The concept of resilience is increasingly employed by researchers and policymakers concerned with dy...
Social networks are frequently cited as vital for facilitating successful adaptation and transformat...
While ecological resilience is conceptually established, resilience concepts of social-ecological sy...
While resilience is a major concept in development, climate adaptation, and related domains, many do...
Social networks are frequently cited as vital for facilitating successful adaptation and transformat...
Climate change and its associated challenges may have an impact on people and communities. Studies p...
If resilience theory is to be of practical value for policy makers and resource managers, the theory...
More than two decades after E. E. Werner and R. S. Smith (1982), N. Garmezy (1983), and M. Rutter (1...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Resilience is the ability of a system to absorb dist...
In various scientific disciplines resilience has become a key concept for theoretical frameworks and...
This article defines social resilience as the ability of groups or communities to cope with external...
Resilience studies build on the notion that phenomena in the real world should be understood as dyna...
Resilience thinking addresses the dynamics and development of complex social-ecological systems (SES...
Adaptation is a process of deliberate change in anticipation of or in reaction to external stimuli a...
Resilience thinking has developed separately in the bodies of literature on social-ecological system...
The concept of resilience is increasingly employed by researchers and policymakers concerned with dy...
Social networks are frequently cited as vital for facilitating successful adaptation and transformat...
While ecological resilience is conceptually established, resilience concepts of social-ecological sy...
While resilience is a major concept in development, climate adaptation, and related domains, many do...
Social networks are frequently cited as vital for facilitating successful adaptation and transformat...
Climate change and its associated challenges may have an impact on people and communities. Studies p...
If resilience theory is to be of practical value for policy makers and resource managers, the theory...
More than two decades after E. E. Werner and R. S. Smith (1982), N. Garmezy (1983), and M. Rutter (1...