...in thinking

Resilience Engineered

Three films to demystify resilience, funded by The Resilience Shift, developed in collaboration with the Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge.

Summary for Urban Policymakers

A summary for urban policymakers, presenting the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments in targeted summaries that can help inform action at the city scale.

Resilient Leadership

Real-time learning from the Covid crisis was captured over 16 weeks of interviews with senior leaders, providing insights into what makes resilient leadership, and how to lead for resilience.

...in practice

Infrastructure Pathways

A resource for practitioners in search of clear, easy-to-navigate guidance on climate-resilient infrastructure, compiled from hundreds of leading resources, and organized by lifecycle phase.

Resilience4Ports

Diagram of a working port

 

A multi-stakeholder, whole-systems approach is needed for ports to become low carbon resilient gateways to growth, as a meeting point of critical infrastructure systems, cities and services.

RR- HIDDEN

Resilience Realized

The Resilience Realized Awards recognise projects around the world at the cutting edge of resilience.

City Water Resilience Approach

CWI Wheel diagram

 

Download the step by step methodology to help cities collaboratively build resilience to local water challenges, mapped with the OurWater online governance tool, as used by cities around the world.


Resilience round-table: professional institutions and associations

The Resilience Shift is hosting a round-table meeting of key professional institutions and associations to identify and explore how these groups might help advance development of policy, standards, and professional education and development with respect to infrastructure resilience.

This is part of the ongoing series of round-table meetings convened by the Resilience Shift and facilitated by its Technical Advisory Group hosted by the University of Cambridge and led by Professor Peter Guthrie and Dr Kristen MacAskill.

These round-tables form part of its work to build a global community equipped with the knowledge and tools needed to drive practice towards better, more resilient critical infrastructure and a safer world. Previous round-tables have included those focused on Ports and logistics, Christchurch’s regeneration, and City-scale modelling.

The objective of the meeting of key institutions is to establish ways that institutions and professional associations can engage with each other and with the Resilience Shift to accelerate change in how resilient infrastructure is delivered in practice.

This event is by invitation only and will take place at the Moller Centre in Cambridge, United Kingdom, on 28 November–29 November 2019.

For more information please email info@resilienceshift.org or see the attached overview document.

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