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Resilience, Critical Transitions, and Integrated Risk Governance

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Title: Resilience, Critical Transitions, and Integrated Risk Governance


1
Resilience, Critical Transitions, and Integrated
Risk Governance
  • Guoyi Han
  • Stockholm Environment Institute

International Workshop on Global Environmental
Change and Integrated Risk Governance 57 June
2007. Beijing, China
2
Rationale of the Talk
  • China today is in the midst of multiple
    transitions
  • From a traditional agrarian society to a
    industrial nation
  • From rural to urban
  • From a planning to a market based economy
  • Along with it, the reform of the financial
    system, the social welfare system, education,
    medical care, etc, etc.
  • Those transitions are critical for that,
    depending the paths chosen, they bring both
    opportunities and risks, and the results have
    profound implications for China as well as to the
    world in large. Managing the risk in transition
    is a central challenge, not only the risk
    management of each one of those transitions, but
    an integrated approach that has to deal with the
    intricate inter-linkages of the multiple
    transitions simultaneously.
  • Even more so, when
  • Those transitions happen in a stunning speed at a
    massive scale
  • Those transitions happen in a world of global
    change and globalization
  • The Resilience perspective offers new insights
    and approaches that are useful for addressing the
    integrated risk governance challenge.

3
Structure of the talk tripartite
  • Start with a brief review of the development of
    the resilience research and the scholar networks
  • Second part focuses on the key core concepts with
    the current resilience theory, and some examples
    as illustrations and research propositions and
  • In third part of the talk, if time allows, to
    share a few thoughts on the resilience and
    disaster risk reduction
  • Conclude with a few remarks and reflections on
    the implications of a resilience perspective for
    the governance of social ecological system as
    adaptive complex systems

4
PART I A brief history
5
The Concept
  • Derived from latin word resilio, meaning to jump
    back
  • Multiple usage from various disciplines
  • Physics
  • Psychology and Psychiatry
  • Ecology engineering resilience vs. ecological
    reslience
  • Holling 1973 Resilience and stability of
    ecological systems
  • Resilience Alliance, since 1999
    www.resilience.org
  • The Stockholm Resilience Center

6
Resilience of the SESs
  • The capacity of linked social-ecological systems
    to absorb recurrent disturbances such as
    hurricanes or floods so as to retain essential
    structures, processes and feedbacks
  • (Holling, 1973 Walker et al., 2004).
  • the degree to which a complex adaptive system is
    capable of self-organisation and the degree to
    which the system can build capacity for learning
    and adaptation
  • (Carpenter et al., 2004 Folke et al., 2002).
  • The capacity of a system, community or society
    potentially exposed to hazards to adapt, by
    resisting or changing in order to reach and
    maintain an acceptable level of functioning and
    structure This is determined by the degree to
    which the social system is capable of organising
    itself to increase this capacity for learning
    from past disasters for better future protection
    and to improve risk reduction measures.
  • (UN/ISDR. 2004).

The amount of stress The degree of
self-organization and The capacity for learning
and adaptation.
7
Resilience, Vulnerability and Adaptability
  • There are all central concepts for understanding
    and coping with, and adapt to change and dealing
    with stresses.
  • They however have a different focus or entry
    point in framing the research questions. In turn,
    it has different policy implications.
  • RESILIENCE is more concerned with the state of
    being, therefore the key question for them is
    when the state will change regime shift,
    tipping points, feedback loops .
  • VULNERABILITY is about the potential to be
    harmed so the central question is what if
    something happens (not limited to the state
    shift and who and where will be more affected
  • ADAPATBILITY is central for building resilience
    and reducing vulnerability.

8
M. Janssen, et al. (2006), Scholarly networks on
resilience, vulnerability and adaptation within
the human dimensions of global environmental
change, Global Environmental Change 16(3)
240-252 
9
M. Janssen, et al. (2006), Scholarly networks on
resilience, vulnerability and adaptation within
the human dimensions of global environmental
change, Global Environmental Change 16(3)
240-252 
10
M. Janssen, et al. (2006), Scholarly networks on
resilience, vulnerability and adaptation within
the human dimensions of global environmental
change, Global Environmental Change 16(3)
240-252 
11
PART II Resilience Thinking
12
The Four Basic Tenets of Resilience Theory
  • Social ecological systems
  • Are self-organizing with centripetal dynamics
  • Have multiple stability domains
  • Change through four phases of an adaptive cycle
    and
  • function at multiple scales with critical
    cross-scale (panarchy) effects

Source Brain Walker
13
Multiple Stable Domains
Scheffer, et al. 2001. Nature Vol. 413
14
The trajectories can be complicated
Degradation of resource base/system
Requires family
Requires international aid
Requires social network
Insurance mechanisms
15
Adaptive Cycle
The four stages r, K ?, a
The Backloop and forward loop
16
Adaptive Cycle
17
Panarchy
18
Regime shift and thresholds
Source Walker, B. and J. A. Meyers. 2004.
Ecology and Society 9(2) 3.
19
Multiple thresholds, feedback Dynamics
Source Kinzig, et al. 2006, Ecology and Society
11(1)20
20
Possible trajectories of a 2-variable system
through time. The positions of the dashed lines
on the axes represent critical threshold levels
Source Walker, B., S. Carpenter, and others.
2002. Conservation Ecology 6(1) 14.
21
Resilience Assessment/Management Scenario
Planning
A framework for the analysis of resilience in
social-ecological systems
Source Walker, B., S. Carpenter, and others.
2002. Conservation Ecology 6(1) 14.
22
Sources C. Folke, et al. 2002 Adger et al. 2005
23
Will YueYaQuan survive?
24
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25
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26
How to examine the YYQ problem proposition
  • This project will start by compiling a history of
    the YYQ area and characterize the SES then map
    out the changes in the past 30 years, in order to
    examine whether, when, and what kind of
    thresholds has been passed, how the feed back
    loops have been altered as result, eventually to
    test whether a regime shift has happened at
    YYQ, which will lead to a new state where there
    will be no YYQ as we know it.
  • Thresholds matrix cross-domain and cross-scale

27
The transportation example
28
The Challenge
  • Beijing Experienced tenfold increase of private
    cars in the last 10 years, and widespread
    congestion
  • Shanghai Experienced increases of private cars
    from 10k to 250k in 8 years and rising congestion
  • Shenzhen Traffic accidents are a main cause of
    death, especially among the 20-40 age group
  • Nationwide Carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon from
    auto emissions account for nearly 80 of the
    total in urban areas.

(source Graham Smith, 2006 China Environment
Forum 2006)
29
The Costs
  • Slow and congested transport system stifles the
    efficiency of the urban economy.
  • Excessive conversion of farmland for urban
    development wastes scarce resources.
  • Excessive investment in urban transport incurs
    heavy financial liabilities.
  • Rising fuel consumption endangers the nations
    long-run energy security.
  • Growing green house gas (GHG) emissions are
    increasingly an international concern.

30
Eroding the resilience
  • No coherent urban transport strategy
  • Piecemeal and ad hoc approach
  • Heavy investment in road capacity
  • Bicycle rights-of-way dismantled
  • Pedestrian sidewalks and roadside trees
    eliminated
  • Parking not managed

31
Proposition
  • Lowering card prices Increasing income
  • Private card ownership

Rapidly Increasing Middle Class
Pressure on car friendly urban transportation
infrastructure
Automobile dependent lock-in
32
PART 3 Resilience and Disaster Risk Reduction
in Coupled SESs
33
Refining and reshaping the disaster paradigm
  • IDNDR, 1990s
  • Yokohama Declaration, 1994
  • UNISDR
  • Rio (1992) Kyoto (1997)
  • MDGs (2000)
  • WSSD, Johannesburg 2002
  • FAO, UNDP UN HABITAT
  • IFRC, World Disaster Reports (since 1993)
  • WB IADB
  • WCDR 2005, Kobe The Hyogo Framework for Action
    2005-2010
  • IDRC 2006 Davos

34
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35
The Hyogo Framework for Action 2005 2015
The Yokohama Strategy adopted in 1994, was the
landmark in setting the path towards a Culture of
Prevention. Much was said and remain to be done,
so what are the new opportunities with the new
Hyogo Framework for Action that should guide us
in the decade to come??
  • International acknowledgement that disaster risk
    reduction (DRR) is a matter of sustainable
    development development it must be seen as a
    integral part of development planning, livelihood
    security, resource management and environmental
    protection.
  • There is trend and clear emphases of refocusing
    aid in making those linkages from both
    development and humanitarian agencies, which
    provides new opportunities for regional and
    international cooperation in disaster risk
    reduction.
  • There are tremendous opportunities on linking DRR
    to other major international and national
    agendas, such as the Johannesburg Plan of Action,
    MDGs, climate change adaptation (example??),
    poverty reduction (e,g., PRSPs).
  • The firm realization of the centrality of
    vulnerability analysis and resilience building in
    DRR from both communities of researcher and
    practitioners.
  • The vulnerability and resilience focus demand a
    multi-hazard/stress approach

36
Key Elements of the Paradigm Shift in DRR
Call for integrated disaster management, living
with natural disasters, mainstreaming DRR
37
Factors Driving the Shift
  • Worsening global impact of natural disasters
    impact globally - particularly uneven pattern
  • Linkage between development and disaster has
    become increasingly clear
  • Promise of the vulnerability and resilience
    concepts, which underlie the shift and allow it
    to be framed

38
Promises of the Vulnerability and Resilience
Concepts
  • Coupled social and ecological system focus -
    focus on receiver unit rather than trigger event
  • Multiple stresses/stressors - linkage between
    livelihood and disaster
  • Spatial and temporal dynamics and cross-scale
    linkages
  • To adapt rather than to Control from
    resilience thinking.
  • Link to sustainable development

39
Beauty Is Also The Beast The Challenges Stem
Precisely from the Promises
  • The conceptual advances represented by the
    vulnerability/resilience-based approach to DRR 
    has not been matched by an empirical/operational
    one. 
  • Therefore, we are at a stage where we know the
    practices are inadequate, but we do not yet have
    the conceptual tools, political will, and
    methodologies to meaningfully implement new
    approaches

40
Linking Resilience to DRR
  • The four phases of transition and four stages of
    the disaster risk management
  • Pre-disaster
  • During
  • Immediate relief
  • Long term reconstruction/recovery
  • Resilience shifts the focus from perturbation to
    the system. It is a desired property of the
    system in most cases.
  • The feed back dynamics is the key. As the
    feedback changes, the resilience of the system
    will change

41
A very simplified example floodplain land use
and flood risk management
42
Conceptual/Operational Divide
  • Lack of adequate analytical tools
  • Missing the linkages between the core concepts
  • Policy penetration is still limited
  • The enabling institutional structure is not there

43
Building Social-ecological Resilience
  • Rather than rigid command and control
    approaches to development and natural resources
    management resilience thinking places greater
    emphasis on
  • Flexibility
  • Adaptation
  • Diversity
  • Connectedness
  • Improving social resilience involves
  • Good governance
  • Social learning
  • Adaptive capacity
  • Social equity

44
Implications of Resilience Perspective
  • Today the world is a novel and turbulent
    place. Resilience perspective provides a new
    framework for analyzing socialecological systems
    in a changing world facing many uncertainties and
    challenges.
  • In well-understood stable situations our
    expectations about the future are often correct,
    however in more turbulent times expectations will
    frequently be proved wrong.  We need better tools
    for thinking about the future in turbulent
    times. 
  • Resilience perspective requires that emphasis be
    focused on coping with disasters rather than
    promising on control or avoid their underlying
    physical forces.
  • It is not the maximum yield it is where the
    thresholds are.

45
Reflections
  • China building resilience to avoid the lock-in
    risks that present a major research challenge
    for the integrated risk governance for the social
    ecological systems that are in rapid transition,
    such as China today.
  • In the past couple of years, particularly since
    the 11th FYP, we have noticed the shift of
    perspectives ( at least a call for shift) by the
    Chinese government.
  • From Fast and Good to Good and Fast
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