From academic to applied: operationalising resilience in river systems | Natural Hazards Research Australia

From academic to applied: operationalising resilience in river systems

This research proposes six elements that need to be considered in the design and implementation of resilience-based river policy and programs.

Publication type

Journal Article

Published date

03/2018

Author Melissa Parsons , Martin Thoms
Abstract

The concept of resilience acknowledges the ability of societies to live and develop with dynamic environments. Given the recognition of the need to prepare for anticipated and unanticipated shocks, applications of resilience are increasing as the guiding principle of public policy and programs in areas such as disaster management, urban planning, natural resource management, and climate change adaptation. River science is an area in which the adoption of resilience is increasing, leading to the proposition that resilience may become a guiding principle of river policy and programs. Debate about the role of resilience in rivers is part of the scientific method, but disciplinary disunity about the ways to approach resilience application in policy and programs may leave river science out of the policy process. We propose six elements that need to be considered in the design and implementation of resilience-based river policy and programs: rivers as social-ecological systems; the science-policy interface; principles, capacities, and characteristics of resilience; cogeneration of knowledge; adaptive management; and the state of the science of resilience.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Geomorphology
Date Published
03/2018
URL
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169555X17302118
DOI
10.1016/j.geomorph.2017.08.040
Locators Google Scholar | DOI

Related projects

Project
The Australian Disaster Resilience Index