Brian Walker , Finding Resilience: Change and Uncertainty in Nature and Society, Melbourne: CSIRO Publishing, 2019, 157 pp., ISBN 9 7814 8631 0777, A$43.75.

IF 0.7 Q2 AREA STUDIES Queensland Review Pub Date : 2020-12-01 DOI:10.1017/qre.2020.20
N. Osborne
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

I first encountered Walker’s work on resilience when I was a novice researcher in human geography, coming to terms with our failure to mitigate climate change in a timely enough way, and needing something other than mitigation or adaptation to think with. A little over a decade later, I approached Walker’s new book with some hesitation. I have grown worried that resilience places too much importance on strength or robustness, and is insufficiently attentive to what is valuable but intrinsically vulnerable – beings, relations, systems, that cannot be made resilient, but are nonetheless worthy of existence. I also loathe how the term can deflect attention away from the causes of ecological and social harm, busying us with the ever-intensifying task of coping with increasing onslaughts, instead of dismantling the structures causing them. Walker almost immediately won me over with the concluding sentence of his first chapter: ‘There are limits to humanity’s resilience’ (2019: 11). Walker is precise and critical in his use of the term, not over-stretching its usefulness. A resilient system isn’t one that ‘bounces back’ to a prior state, he argues, but one that learns and reorganises itself in response to disturbance, improving its overall adaptive capacity without changing its core functions. He reminds us that resilience is not always positive – some invasive species are frustratingly resilient to efforts to manage them, and some harmful systems are troublingly resilient to transformation. Walker’s book refreshes resilience, revisiting how we have come to understand it, clarifying its usefulness in thinking about socio-ecological systems. The book is organised in five parts. Part 1 comprises introductory matter and scene-setting. Part 2 describes resilience in natural systems, what it is and the history of its formulation in ecological research, addressing familiar ecological concerns like keystone species, interconnectedness, disturbance and diversity. This is perhaps Walker at his best – he is, after all, an ecologist, and his love of and fascination with the natural world are contagious. Part 3 considers resilience in human systems, beginning with more individual, psychological understandings of resilience before considering how resilience operates on the scale of communities. Part 4 attempts to synthesise Parts 2 and 3, and Walker grapples more explicitly with questions of inequality, inequity and the role of economic systems in ecological harm. Part 5 outlines ‘a way forward’. Throughout, the writing is engaging, accessible to a Book Reviews
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Brian Walker,《寻找韧性:自然与社会的变化与不确定性》,墨尔本:CSIRO出版社,2019年,157页,ISBN 9 7814 8631 0777,43.75澳元。
我第一次遇到沃克关于恢复力的工作是在我还是一名人文地理学的新手研究员时,我接受了我们未能及时缓解气候变化的事实,需要一些缓解或适应之外的东西来思考。十多年后,我带着些许犹豫走近沃克的新书。我越来越担心,韧性过于重视力量或稳健性,而对有价值但本质上脆弱的东西不够关注——不能使其具有韧性,但仍然值得存在的存在、关系、系统。我也讨厌这个词如何将人们的注意力从生态和社会危害的原因上转移开,让我们忙于应对日益严重的冲击,而不是拆除造成冲击的结构。沃克几乎立刻用他第一章的最后一句话赢得了我的好感:“人类的韧性是有限的”(2019:11)。沃克对这个词的使用是精确而挑剔的,并没有过分夸大它的有用性。他认为,一个有弹性的系统不是一个“反弹”到以前状态的系统,而是一个在不改变核心功能的情况下学习和重组自身以应对干扰的系统。他提醒我们,恢复力并不总是积极的——一些入侵物种对管理它们的努力有着令人沮丧的恢复力,而一些有害系统对转型的恢复力则令人沮丧。沃克的书刷新了韧性,重新审视了我们是如何理解它的,阐明了它在思考社会生态系统方面的有用性。这本书分为五个部分。第一部分包括引言和场景设置。第2部分描述了自然系统中的复原力,它是什么,以及它在生态学研究中的形成历史,解决了人们熟悉的生态问题,如关键物种、相互联系、干扰和多样性。这也许是沃克最好的一面——毕竟,他是一名生态学家,他对自然世界的热爱和迷恋是有感染力的。第3部分考虑了人类系统中的复原力,首先是对复原力的更多个体心理理解,然后再考虑复原力如何在社区规模上发挥作用。第4部分试图综合第2部分和第3部分,沃克更明确地探讨了不平等、不公平和经济系统在生态危害中的作用等问题。第5部分概述了“前进的道路”。自始至终,文章引人入胜,可供书评访问
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来源期刊
Queensland Review
Queensland Review AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
66.70%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Published in association with Griffith University Queensland Review is a multi-disciplinary journal of Australian Studies which focuses on the history, literature, culture, society, politics and environment of the state of Queensland. Queensland’s relations with Asia, the Pacific islands and Papua New Guinea are a particular focus of the journal, as are comparative studies with other regions. In addition to scholarly articles, Queensland Review publishes commentaries, interviews, and book reviews.
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