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Community resilience,globalization, and transitional pathways of decision-making
Authors:Geoff A Wilson
Institution:1. Department of Geography, University of Idaho, P.O. Box 443021, Moscow, ID 83844 33021, USA;2. Department of Bioregional Planning and Community, University of Idaho, 875 Perimeter Drive MS 3017, Moscow, ID 83844 33021, USA;1. Geographic and Oceanographic Sciences School, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China;2. Key Laboratory of Coastal Zone Exploitation and Protection, Ministry of Land and Resources, China;3. Department of Land Management, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China;4. Department of Public Policy, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China; Shenzhen Research Institute, City University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, China;1. School of Environmental Sciences, Institute for Land Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, PO Box 789, 2640 Albury, NSW, Australia;2. Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts, Australian Centre for Sustainable Business and Development, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, QLD, Australia
Abstract:This article investigates the impacts of globalization processes on community resilience. It argues that theoretical concepts such as transition theory can provide a lens through which resilience pathways at community level can be better understood, and proposes a framework focused on a social resilience approach for understanding community resilience as the conceptual space at the intersection between economic, social and environmental capital. It argues that certain types of communities are losing resilience through increased embeddedness into globalized pathways of decision-making, while other communities may be gaining resilience, although not one system is either totally resilient or totally vulnerable. Striking the right ‘balance’ between communities and their scalar interactions with the global level is key for maximization of community resilience: while too much isolation of a community may be bad in light of over-dependency on local resources, skills and people, ‘over-globalization’, with possible loss of autonomy and identity, may be equally fraught with problems. In particular, relocalized communities have, so far, not shown much tangible success, as almost all members of the relocalization process at community level are simultaneously embedded within the global capitalist system through their dependencies on global economic processes.
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