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Arana, M M and Wittek, R P M (2016) Community resilience: Sustained cooperation and space usage in collective housing. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 764-74.

De Carli, B (2016) Micro-resilience and justice: Co-producing narratives of change. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 775-88.

Fagan-Watson, B and Burchell, K (2016) Heatwave planning: Community involvement in co-producing resilience. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 754-63.

Gibson-Graham, J K, Hill, A and Law, L (2016) Re-embedding economies in ecologies: Resilience building in more than human communities. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 703-16.

Krzywoszynska, A, Buckley, A, Birch, H, Watson, M, Chiles, P, Mawyin, J, Holmes, H and Gregson, N (2016) Co-producing energy futures: Impacts of participatory modelling. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 804-15.

Petrescu, D, Petcou, C and Baibarac, C (2016) Co-producing commons-based resilience: Lessons from R-urban. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 717-36.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: participatory action research; bottom-up approaches; agency; social networks; design; co-production; resilience; commons; community participation; sustainability; adaptability; communities; emergence; transition; transformability; construction & build
  • ISBN/ISSN: 0961-3218
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/09613218.2016.1214891
  • Abstract:
    The co-production of resilience in European urban neighbourhoods is explored based on the experiences from a case study. Within the current resilience imperative', co-production processes involving multiple stakeholders can be a key factor for increasing cities' resilience. Co-produced resilience processes are more successful when embedded in collaborative forms of governance such as those associated with urban commons and when fulfilling needed roles with a community. Through the application of the R-Urban approach in a neighbourhood of Colombes (near Paris), the co-production of a commons-based resilience strategy is described. This involved a group of designers as initiators and a number of citizen as stakeholders of a network of civic hubs. The specific strategies involving a participatory setting, collective governance aspects and circular economies are analysed in the light of co-production theories and practices. Internal and external challenges are identified within the implementation process. The nature of conflicts and negotiations in this co-production approach are discussed, and the role of the architects/designers as agents within the process is investigated. Reflections from this example are provided on the limits and promises of this approach and the lessons learned from R-Urban for collaborative civic resilience.;The co-production of resilience in European urban neighbourhoods is explored based on the experiences from a case study. Within the current 'resilience imperative', co-production processes involving multiple stakeholders can be a key factor for increasing cities' resilience. Co-produced resilience processes are more successful when embedded in collaborative forms of governance such as those associated with urban commons and when fulfilling needed roles with a community. Through the application of the R-Urban approach in a neighbourhood of Colombes (near Paris), the co-production of a commons-based resilience strategy is described. This involved a group of designers as initiators and a number of citizen as stakeholders of a network of civic hubs. The specific strategies involving a participatory setting, collective governance aspects and circular economies are analysed in the light of co-production theories and practices. Internal and external challenges are identified within the implementation process. The nature of conflicts and negotiations in this co-production approach are discussed, and the role of the architects/designers as agents within the process is investigated. Reflections from this example are provided on the limits and promises of this approach and the lessons learned from R-Urban for collaborative civic resilience.;  The co-production of resilience in European urban neighbourhoods is explored based on the experiences from a case study. Within the current 'resilience imperative', co-production processes involving multiple stakeholders can be a key factor for increasing cities' resilience. Co-produced resilience processes are more successful when embedded in collaborative forms of governance such as those associated with urban commons and when fulfilling needed roles with a community. Through the application of the R-Urban approach in a neighbourhood of Colombes (near Paris), the co-production of a commons-based resilience strategy is described. This involved a group of designers as initiators and a number of citizen as stakeholders of a network of civic hubs. The specific strategies involving a participatory setting, collective governance aspects and circular economies are analysed in the light of co-production theories and practices. Internal and external challenges are identified within the implementation process. The nature of conflicts and negotiations in this co-production approach are discussed, and the role of the architects/designers as agents within the process is investigated. Reflections from this example are provided on the limits and promises of this approach and the lessons learned from R-Urban for collaborative civic resilience.;

Stevenson, F, Baborska-Narozny, M and Chatterton, P (2016) Resilience, redundancy and low-carbon living: Co-producing individual and community learning. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 789-803.

Stollmann, J (2016) Neighbourhood resilience in mass housing: Co-production via research-by-design. Building Research & Information, 44(07), 737-53.