Litcius/Paper detail

Infrastructure resilience to navigate increasingly uncertain and complex conditions in the Anthropocene

Mikhail Chester, B. Shane Underwood, Braden Allenby, Margaret Garcia, Constantine Samaras, Samuel A. Markolf, Kelly T. Sanders, Benjamin L. Preston, Thaddeus R. Miller

2021npj Urban Sustainability71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Infrastructure are at the center of three trends: accelerating human activities, increasing uncertainty in social, technological, and climatological factors, and increasing complexity of the systems themselves and environments in which they operate. Resilience theory can help infrastructure managers navigate increasing complexity. Engineering framings of resilience will need to evolve beyond robustness to consider adaptation and transformation, and the ability to handle surprise. Agility and flexibility in both physical assets and governance will need to be emphasized, and sensemaking capabilities will need to be reoriented. Transforming infrastructure is necessary to ensuring that core systems keep pace with a changing world.

Topics & Concepts

PaceSurpriseResilience (materials science)Corporate governanceRisk analysis (engineering)AnthropoceneAdaptation (eye)Flexibility (engineering)Computer scienceSensemakingCritical infrastructureRobustness (evolution)BusinessEnvironmental resource managementComputer securityKnowledge managementEconomicsSociologyEnvironmental ethicsGeographyManagementChemistryPhilosophyOpticsGeneThermodynamicsCommunicationGeodesyPhysicsFinanceBiochemistryInfrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability AnalysisDisaster Management and ResilienceSustainability and Climate Change Governance