3.8 Article

Capacities for resilience: persisting, adapting and transforming through bricolage

Journal

ECOSYSTEMS AND PEOPLE
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/26395916.2023.2240434

Keywords

Jessica Cockburn; >; Resilience; sustainable development; transformation; adaptation; agricultural change; agency; bricolage; mountains

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Resilience has gained popularity in sustainability research and practice as a way to describe change. It refers to the capacity of people, practices, and processes to persist, adapt, or transform. While bouncing back from shocks and adapting to change are commonly associated with resilience, there is also a call for transformative agenda. The enactment of resilience capacities through social practices is underexplored and there is a need for interdisciplinary dialogue and learning.
Resilience has become increasingly popular in sustainability research and practice as a way to describe change. Within this discourse, the notion of resilience as the capacity of people, practices and processes, to persist, adapt or transform is particularly salient. The ability to bounce back from shock (persistence) or to take adaptive measures to cope with change are most commonly attributed to resilience, but at the same time, there is a strong push for a transformation agenda from various social and environmental movements. How capacities for resilience are enacted and performed through social practices remains relatively underexplored and there is potential for more dialogue and learning across disciplinary traditions. In this article, we outline the 'Resilience Capacities Framework' as a way to a) explicitly address questions of agency in how resilience capacities are enacted and b) account for the dynamic interactions between pathways of persistence, adaptation and transformation. Our starting point is to conceptualise future pathways as co-evolved, whereby social and ecological relationships are shaped through processes of selection, variation and retention, enacted in everyday practices. Drawing on theories of bricolage and structuration, we elaborate on the role of actors as bricoleurs, consciously and non-consciously shaping socio-ecological relationships and pathways of change. Informed by cases of rural change from mountain areas, we explore the extent to which an approach focusing on agency and bricolage can illuminate how the enactment of resilience capacities shapes intersecting pathways of change.

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