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Making resilience: everyday affect and global affiliation in Australian slow cities

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 16:31 authored by Sarah Pink, Tania LewisTania Lewis
Resilience is becoming a key representational concept across academic, policy and planning literatures, creating a need to explore fully how experienced forms of resilience emerge. In this article we respond to this by analyzing how locality-based resilience is made, in the example of the emergent Slow City movement in Australia. Through their activities and narratives Australian Slow City leaders expressed their relationship to the (broadly sustainability-oriented) goals of the movement's framework in relation to the maintaining and making of local specialness and recovery. To understand this we go beyond the binarisms connoted by a concept of resistance through contestation or reterritorialization, to suggest such resilience is made through the relationality of things, narratives, flows and processes that traverse the local-global in between.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1177/1474474014520761
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 14744740

Journal

Cultural Geographies

Volume

21

Issue

4

Start page

695

End page

710

Total pages

16

Publisher

Sage Publications

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2014

Former Identifier

2006047285

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-08-19

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