ABSTRACT
Resilience will be a defining quality of the twenty-first century. As we witness the increasingly turbulent effects of climate change, the multiple challenges of resource depletion and wage stagnation, we know that our current ways of living are not resilient.
This volume takes resilience as a transformative concept to ask where and what architecture might contribute. Bringing together cross-disciplinary perspectives from architecture, urban design, art, geography, building science and psychoanalysis, it aims to open up multiple perspectives of research, spatial strategies and projects that are testing how we can build local resilience in preparation for major societal challenges, defining the position of architecture in urban resilience discourse.
Chapter 16 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 3.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Dialogue I|2 pages
Narratives of resilience
chapter 2|15 pages
Collective documenting of extreme urban transformations
part Dialogue II|2 pages
Community resilience and the right to housing
chapter 5|15 pages
Social architectures of age-friendly community resilience
part Dialogue III|1 pages
New pedagogies of resilience
chapter 10|10 pages
Provocateurs or consultants? The role of Sheffield School of Architecture in the co-production of Castlegate
part Dialogue IV|2 pages
Challenging climate denial
part Dialogue V|2 pages
Resilience ethics and interdependence
chapter 15|14 pages
Resilience as interdependence
chapter 17|9 pages
Living resiliency
part Dialogue VI|2 pages
Scales of resilience concerning the city, the region and globalisation