Community Resilience

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A01=Katy Wright
adaptation
Author_Katy Wright
Category=JHB
Chronic
Civil Contingencies Act
Climate Change
collective coping strategies
community
Community Resilience
Contemporary Society
disaster
disaster adaptation
emergency
Emergency Planning
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
FEMA
Flood Groups
Foodbank
Grenfell Tower Fire
Household Preparedness
human geography research
Income Shock
Katy Wright
Local Resilience Forums
neoliberal policy critique
policy impact analysis
Prepping
Projected Climate Change Effects
Public Engagement
Resilience
resilience policy evaluation in UK
Resilience Strategies
Secretary Of State
Situational Vulnerabilities
social vulnerability
Successive UK Government
transformation
UK Climate Change Act
UK Government
UK Policy
Welfare Reforms
Women's Low Socioeconomic Status

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138329478
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book provides an alternative perspective on community resilience, drawing on critical sociological and social policy insights about how people individually and collectively cope with different kinds of adversity. Based on the idea that resilience is more than simply an invention of neoliberal governments, this book explores diverse expressions of resilience and considers what supports and undermines people’s resilience in different contexts. Focusing on the United Kingdom, it examines the contradictions and limitations of neoliberal resilience policies and the role of policy in shaping how vulnerabilities are distributed and how resilience is manifested.

The book explores different types of resilience including planning, response, recovery, adaptation and transformation, which are examined in relation to different types of threat such as financial hardship, disasters and climate change. It argues that resilience cannot act as an antidote to vulnerability, and aims to demonstrate the importance of shared institutions in underpinning resilience and in preventing socially created vulnerabilities.

It will be of interest to academics, students and well-informed practitioners working with the concept of resilience within the subject areas of Sociology, Social Policy, Human Geography, Environmental Humanities and International Development.

Katy Wright is Lecturer in Sociology & Social Policy at the University of Leeds. She is the Programme Director of the MA in Social & Public Policy and the Deputy Director of the Bauman Institute and of the Centre for Transdisciplinary Methodology.

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