Varieties of resilience : studies in governmentality / Jonathan Joseph, University of Sheffield.
Material type: TextPublication details: UK Cambridge 2018Description: 212 pISBN:- 9781316601570 (Paperback)
- 9781107146570 (Hardback)
- 320.019 JOS-JÂ 23
- JF1525.C74Â J67 2018
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Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 320 | General Stack (For lending) | 320.019 JOS-J (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 40523 |
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320.0110973 TUR-P End times : elites, counter-elites, and the path of political disintegration / | 320.014 DAS-B Gandhian thought and communication : rethinking the Mahatma in the media age / | 320.014 RIC-D Politics without stories : | 320.019 JOS-J Varieties of resilience : | 320.019 POS-J Narissism and politics : | 320.071054 MEN-N Critical studies in politics : exploring sites, selves, power / | 320.072 COO-A Ranking the world : |
Resilience refers to the ability of individuals, groups and societies to withstand and recover from external shocks. This pioneering book-length comparative study examines resilience as it is experienced across different countries, such as the UK, US, France, Germany and EU. Furthermore, it considers cases from policy sectors including national security, counterterrorism, civil protection, disaster risk reduction, critical infrastructure protection and overseas interventions. In doing so, Joseph provides an account of why it is that resilience has become such a popular policy topic, looking at its focus on complexity, the human and the role of resilient individuals and communities. Arguing that resilience has risen to prominence because it fits with a particularly Anglo-Saxon and neoliberal form of governance, Joseph discovers differing results across policy domains and national contexts, fomenting variations and tensions in the international discourse of resilience
Includes bibliographical references.
Introduction : resilience in context -- The development of resilience -- Resilience in national security and counter-terrorism strategy -- Disasters, emergencies and infrastructure protection -- Resilience in development strategy and humanitarian intervention -- The Anglo-Saxon approach to resilience and the alternatives -- Conclusion.
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