Brian Walker, a research fellow at the Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) in Australia and at the
Stockholm Resilience Center, is Chair of the Resilience Alliance
Français
“Resilience,” like love, is difficult to define. Yet everyone – from United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to government agencies, company boards, and community groups – is talking about how to build or maintain it. So, is resilience a useful concept or just a fleeting buzzword?
Français
“Resilience,” like love, is difficult to define. Yet everyone – from United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to government agencies, company boards, and community groups – is talking about how to build or maintain it. So, is resilience a useful concept or just a fleeting buzzword?
To
answer that question, we need to start with a different one: How much
do you think you can change without becoming a different person? How
much can an ecosystem, city, or business change before it looks and
functions like a different kind of ecosystem, city, or business?
All
of these are self-organizing systems. Your body, for example, maintains
a constant temperature of approximately 37 degrees Celsius. If your
body temperature rises, you start to sweat in order to cool down; if
your temperature falls, your muscles vibrate (shiver) to warm up. Your
body relies on negative feedbacks to keep it functioning in the same
way.
That is basically the
definition of resilience: the capacity of a system to absorb
disturbance, re-organize, and keep functioning in much the same way as
before.
But there are
limits, or thresholds, to a system’s resilience, beyond which it assumes
a different way of functioning – a different identity. Many coral reefs
that were once home to a rich diversity of fish, for example, have
become algal or turf ecosystems with very few fish.
Two
main thresholds dictate this change in coral reefs. The more nutrients
that enter the water (run-off from nearby land), the more the algae are
favored, until, at some point, they take over. Likewise, if too many
herbivorous fish are removed, algae gain a competitive advantage over
the corals. These two thresholds interact: the more nutrients there are,
the less fishing is needed to “flip” the system into the algal state;
and the fewer fish there are, the less nutrients are needed.
Moreover,
thresholds can move as the environment changes. In the coral reef
example, both the nutrient and fish thresholds fall as sea temperatures
rise and the oceans become more acidic. So, as climate change proceeds,
smaller incremental rises in nutrient levels and drops in fish stocks
will flip coral reefs to algal states.
Thresholds
also occur in social systems: think of fads or, more seriously, riot
behavior in crowds. In business, the debt/income ratio is a well-known
threshold, one that can move in step with exchange rates. Threshold
effects have also been identified in labor supply, transport services,
and other determinants of companies’ well-being.
Given the importance of threshold effects, how can a system’s resilience be maintained?
For
starters, making a system very resilient in one way can cause it to
lose resilience in other ways. So we have to understand and enhance general
resilience – a system’s capacity to cope with a variety of shocks, in
all aspects of its functioning. From research on a variety of systems,
the following attributes have been shown to confer general resilience:
·
A high degree of diversity, especially response diversity (different
ways of doing the same thing, often mistakenly thought of as
“redundancy”).
· A relatively modular structure that does not over-connect its components;.
· A strong capacity to respond quickly to change.
· Significant “openness,” allowing emigration and immigration of all components (closed systems remain static).
·
Maintenance of adequate reserves – for example, seed banks in
ecosystems or memory in social systems (which speaks against
just-in-time supply services).
· Encouragement of innovation and creativity.
· High social capital, particularly trust, leadership, and social networks.
· Adaptive governance (flexible, distributive, and learning-based).
These
attributes comprise the essentials of a resilient system. But
resilience itself is neither “good” nor “bad.” Undesirable systems, such
as dictatorships and saline landscapes, can be very resilient. In these
cases, the system’s resilience should be reduced.
Moreover,
it is impossible to understand or manage a system’s resilience at only
one scale. At least three must be included – the focal scale and at
least one below and one above – for cross-scale connections most often
determine a system’s longer-term resilience. Most losses in resilience
are unintended consequences of narrowly focused optimization (like an
“efficiency” drive) that fails to recognize feedback effects on the
focal scale that stem from changes produced by such optimization at
another scale.
Resilience
should not be confused with resistance to change. On the contrary,
trying to prevent change and disturbance to a system reduces its
resilience. A forest that never burns eventually loses species capable
of withstanding fire. Children who are prevented from playing in dirt
grow up with compromised immune systems. Building and maintaining
resilience requires probing its boundaries.
If
a shift into a “bad” state has already happened, or is inevitable and
will be irreversible, the only option is transformation into a different
kind of system – a new way of living (and making a living).
Transformability and resilience are not opposites. In order for a system
to remain resilient at one scale, parts of it at other scales may have
to transform.
In
Australia, for example, the Murray-Darling basin cannot continue as a
resilient agricultural region if all parts of it continue doing what
they are doing now. There simply is not enough water. So some parts of
it will have to transform.
Of
course, the need for transformation to create or maintain resilience
may also affect the highest scale: If some countries and regions are to
remain (or become) resilient social-ecological systems with high human
well-being, it may be necessary to transform the global financial
system.
Transformation
requires getting past denial, creating options for change, and
supporting novelty and experimentation. Financial support from higher
levels (government) all too often takes the form of help not to change (bailouts of too-big-to-fail banks, for example), rather than help to change.
Resilience, in short, is largely about learning how to change in order not to be
changed. Certainty is impossible. The point is to build systems that
will be safe when they fail, not to try to build fail-safe systems.
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