Remembering Disasters: the Resilience Approach
Document type :
Pré-publication ou Document de travail
Title :
Remembering Disasters: the Resilience Approach
Author(s) :
English keyword(s) :
Risks
Disasters
Resilience
Memory
Perception
Heritage
Conservation
Ruins.
Ruins
Disasters
Resilience
Memory
Perception
Heritage
Conservation
Ruins.
Ruins
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Géographie
English abstract : [en]
The aim of this paper is to show how the paradigm of disaster resilience may help reorienting urban planning policies in order to mitigate various types of risks, thanks to carefully thought action on heritage and conservation ...
Show more >The aim of this paper is to show how the paradigm of disaster resilience may help reorienting urban planning policies in order to mitigate various types of risks, thanks to carefully thought action on heritage and conservation practices. In spite of preserved traces of catastrophes and various warnings and heritage policies, there are countless examples of risk mismanagement and urban tragedies. Using resilience as a guiding concept might change the results of these failed risk mitigation policies and irrelevant disaster memory processes. Indeed, the concept of resilience deals with the complexity of temporal and spatial scales, and with partly emotional and qualitative processes, so that this approach fits the issues of urban memory management. Resilience might help underlining the complexity and the subtlety of remembrance messages, and lead to alternative paths better adapted to the diversity of risks, places and actors. However, when it is given territorial materiality, memory is almost always symbolically and politically framed and interpreted; resilience and the territorialization of memory are not ideologically neutral, but urban risk mitigation may come at that price.Show less >
Show more >The aim of this paper is to show how the paradigm of disaster resilience may help reorienting urban planning policies in order to mitigate various types of risks, thanks to carefully thought action on heritage and conservation practices. In spite of preserved traces of catastrophes and various warnings and heritage policies, there are countless examples of risk mismanagement and urban tragedies. Using resilience as a guiding concept might change the results of these failed risk mitigation policies and irrelevant disaster memory processes. Indeed, the concept of resilience deals with the complexity of temporal and spatial scales, and with partly emotional and qualitative processes, so that this approach fits the issues of urban memory management. Resilience might help underlining the complexity and the subtlety of remembrance messages, and lead to alternative paths better adapted to the diversity of risks, places and actors. However, when it is given territorial materiality, memory is almost always symbolically and politically framed and interpreted; resilience and the territorialization of memory are not ideologically neutral, but urban risk mitigation may come at that price.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Comment :
13 pages
Source :
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