Details
Original language | English |
---|---|
Title of host publication | Resilient Communities and the Peccioli Charter |
Subtitle of host publication | Towards the possibility of an Italian Charter for Resilient Communities |
Place of Publication | Cham |
Pages | 71-84 |
Number of pages | 14 |
ISBN (electronic) | 978-3-030-85847-6 |
Publication status | Published - 26 Apr 2022 |
Abstract
The Covid-19 pandemic is throwing a sharp light on the interrelation between metropolis and peripheries in regard to resilience-oriented transformation strategies; peripheries understood in a range from remote, rural, in-between, and urban situations. On the one hand, dependencies and limits of density (even as a prominent factor of sustainability) are questioned; on the other hand, social and spatial fragmentation is observed to being deepened; additionally, new models of living and working are emerging that are based on digitalisation and on a discovery of potentials of peripheral spaces. At the same time, the scenario of fluid, evolving, and performative space-society interaction underlines the call to deepen research for resilience as operative concept for sustainable pathways for recovery: adaptiveness, redundancy, and robustness can serve as principles for territorial innovation. For this aim, the article proposes a perspective of circular dynamics to support novel understanding, engagement, and visioning in resilience-driven innovation processes. Pointing at new material/digital working models, new living models, and new mobility initiated by emerging communities as innovation fields for habitat, in this argumentation the impacts of Covid-19 pandemic, climate change, and spatial fragmentation are seen as a comprehensive case study experiment for methodological innovation in urbanism.
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Engineering(all)
- General Engineering
- Arts and Humanities(all)
- General Arts and Humanities
Research Area (based on ÖFOS 2012)
- TECHNICAL SCIENCES
- Construction Engineering
- Architecture
- Urban design
- SOCIAL SCIENCES
- Human Geography, Regional Geography, Regional Planning
- Human Geography, Regional Geography, Regional Planning
- Urban planning
Sustainable Development Goals
Cite this
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- BibTeX
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Resilient Communities and the Peccioli Charter: Towards the possibility of an Italian Charter for Resilient Communities. Cham, 2022. p. 71-84.
Research output: Chapter in book/report/conference proceeding › Contribution to book/anthology › Research › peer review
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - Territorialising Resilience
T2 - Innovation Processes for Circular Dynamics
AU - Schröder, Jörg
PY - 2022/4/26
Y1 - 2022/4/26
N2 - The Covid-19 pandemic is throwing a sharp light on the interrelation between metropolis and peripheries in regard to resilience-oriented transformation strategies; peripheries understood in a range from remote, rural, in-between, and urban situations. On the one hand, dependencies and limits of density (even as a prominent factor of sustainability) are questioned; on the other hand, social and spatial fragmentation is observed to being deepened; additionally, new models of living and working are emerging that are based on digitalisation and on a discovery of potentials of peripheral spaces. At the same time, the scenario of fluid, evolving, and performative space-society interaction underlines the call to deepen research for resilience as operative concept for sustainable pathways for recovery: adaptiveness, redundancy, and robustness can serve as principles for territorial innovation. For this aim, the article proposes a perspective of circular dynamics to support novel understanding, engagement, and visioning in resilience-driven innovation processes. Pointing at new material/digital working models, new living models, and new mobility initiated by emerging communities as innovation fields for habitat, in this argumentation the impacts of Covid-19 pandemic, climate change, and spatial fragmentation are seen as a comprehensive case study experiment for methodological innovation in urbanism.
AB - The Covid-19 pandemic is throwing a sharp light on the interrelation between metropolis and peripheries in regard to resilience-oriented transformation strategies; peripheries understood in a range from remote, rural, in-between, and urban situations. On the one hand, dependencies and limits of density (even as a prominent factor of sustainability) are questioned; on the other hand, social and spatial fragmentation is observed to being deepened; additionally, new models of living and working are emerging that are based on digitalisation and on a discovery of potentials of peripheral spaces. At the same time, the scenario of fluid, evolving, and performative space-society interaction underlines the call to deepen research for resilience as operative concept for sustainable pathways for recovery: adaptiveness, redundancy, and robustness can serve as principles for territorial innovation. For this aim, the article proposes a perspective of circular dynamics to support novel understanding, engagement, and visioning in resilience-driven innovation processes. Pointing at new material/digital working models, new living models, and new mobility initiated by emerging communities as innovation fields for habitat, in this argumentation the impacts of Covid-19 pandemic, climate change, and spatial fragmentation are seen as a comprehensive case study experiment for methodological innovation in urbanism.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85153641904&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-85847-6_9
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-85847-6_9
M3 - Contribution to book/anthology
SN - 978-3-030-85846-9
SP - 71
EP - 84
BT - Resilient Communities and the Peccioli Charter
CY - Cham
ER -