Resilience and the Fragile City

Humanitarian, security, and development actors are witnessing two distinct but intertwined trends that will have a dramatic impact on their operations. The first relates to the fact that the locus of global poverty and vulnerability to disaster are increasingly concentrated in fragile and conflict a...

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Main Author: John de Boer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Security Governance 2015-04-01
Series:Stability : International Journal of Security and Development
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.stabilityjournal.org/articles/378
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spelling doaj-b1bbdadfdffe49fab414ca81b89e31f92020-11-24T22:03:16ZengCentre for Security GovernanceStability : International Journal of Security and Development2165-26272015-04-014110.5334/sta.fk147Resilience and the Fragile CityJohn de Boer0Centre for Policy Research, United Nations UniversityHumanitarian, security, and development actors are witnessing two distinct but intertwined trends that will have a dramatic impact on their operations. The first relates to the fact that the locus of global poverty and vulnerability to disaster are increasingly concentrated in fragile and conflict affected states. The second trend is associated with the notion that the world has entered a period of unprecedented urbanization. For the first time in history, more people live inside urban centres than outside of them. As the world continues to urbanize, global emergencies will increasingly be concentrated in cities, particularly in lower income and fragile countries where the pace of urbanization is fastest. Yet, despite the growing risks facing urban populations living in fragile and conflict affected countries, there is very little understanding of what can be done to reduce the risks posed to these cities and their populations.http://www.stabilityjournal.org/articles/378Urban violence, humanitarian response, extreme poverty, resilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John de Boer
spellingShingle John de Boer
Resilience and the Fragile City
Stability : International Journal of Security and Development
Urban violence, humanitarian response, extreme poverty, resilience
author_facet John de Boer
author_sort John de Boer
title Resilience and the Fragile City
title_short Resilience and the Fragile City
title_full Resilience and the Fragile City
title_fullStr Resilience and the Fragile City
title_full_unstemmed Resilience and the Fragile City
title_sort resilience and the fragile city
publisher Centre for Security Governance
series Stability : International Journal of Security and Development
issn 2165-2627
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Humanitarian, security, and development actors are witnessing two distinct but intertwined trends that will have a dramatic impact on their operations. The first relates to the fact that the locus of global poverty and vulnerability to disaster are increasingly concentrated in fragile and conflict affected states. The second trend is associated with the notion that the world has entered a period of unprecedented urbanization. For the first time in history, more people live inside urban centres than outside of them. As the world continues to urbanize, global emergencies will increasingly be concentrated in cities, particularly in lower income and fragile countries where the pace of urbanization is fastest. Yet, despite the growing risks facing urban populations living in fragile and conflict affected countries, there is very little understanding of what can be done to reduce the risks posed to these cities and their populations.
topic Urban violence, humanitarian response, extreme poverty, resilience
url http://www.stabilityjournal.org/articles/378
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