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Articles

Resilience in developing systems: the promise of integrated approaches

Pages 297-312 | Received 21 Jan 2016, Accepted 22 Jan 2016, Published online: 10 Feb 2016
 

Abstract

This article describes a contemporary systems approach to resilience in human development and its promise for integrating findings and applications across system levels. Resilience is defined as the capacity of a system for successful adaptation to disturbances that threaten system function, viability, or development. Advantages of this definition are delineated in regard to integrating sciences and disciplines across scales and levels of interaction in a bioecological systems framework. Central concepts of resilience, including pathways and cascades, are described in light of this approach, and advances that link system levels are highlighted. Given significant progress toward a more dynamic, integrated, multisystem approach, developmental resilience science stands at new frontier of possibilities that promises to inform science, practice, and policy focused on building human capacity for surviving and thriving in times of turbulence and change.

Acknowledgments

Preparation of this article was supported in part by the Irving B. Harris Professorship and a Regents Professorship from the University of Minnesota. The author is profoundly grateful to many mentors, colleagues, and students who have shaped her thinking about resilience as the science has matured. They are too numerous to mention, but many are cited in this article.

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