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Defining resilience: A preliminary integrative literature review

January 1, 2016

The term “resilience” is ubiquitous in technical literature; it appears in numerous forms, such as resilience, resiliency, or resilient, and each use may have a different definition depending on the interpretation of the writer. This creates difficulties in understanding what is meant by ‘resilience’ in any given use case, especially in discussions of interdisciplinary research. To better understand this problem, this research constructs a preliminary integrative literature review to map different definitions, applications and calculation methods of resilience invoked within critical infrastructure applications. The preliminary review uses a State-of-the-Art Matrix (SAM) analysis to characterize differences in definition across disciplines and between regions. Qualifying the various usages of resilience will produce a greater precision in the literature and a deeper insight into types of data required for its evaluation, particularly with respect to critical infrastructure calculations and how such data may be analyzed. Results from this SAM analysis will create a framework of key concepts as part of the most common applications for “resilient critical infrastructure” modeling.

Publication Year 2016
Title Defining resilience: A preliminary integrative literature review
Authors Bonnie Wilt, Suzanna K. Long, Thomas G. Shoberg
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70179599
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Center for Geospatial Information Science (CEGIS)