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In our globalised society, people and organisations need to deal with increasingly frequent and severe shocks and stresses. This makes resilience crucial for anyone designing and implementing policy in our today’s complex world. 

Resilience has become an extremely popular concept as the world becomes more complex - but it is a concept that is at times vague and difficult to implement. Building on recent research, this course breaks down the concept of resilience, introducing some of its different flavours, and provides tools for building resilience in practice. Central to this course will be the notion that resilience is both an individual and a system property. Participants will learn new tools for designing policy to meet goals of resilience building to enhance human well-being, as well as approaches for building resilience in their own organisation in order to deal better with complexity and change. 

Course overview

Topics include: 

  • Approaches to resilience from different scientific disciplines, focusing on social-ecological resilience;
  • System dynamics (attractors, regime shifts, feedback loops); 
  • General principles for building resilience;
  • Resilience assessment tools.

 

Learning outcomes:

  • Describe different perspectives on resilience 
  • Use resilience thinking to understand the complex interactions and changes within a policy problem 
  • Use resilience and systems theories to critically analyse policy actions and outcomes 
  • Apply a variety of frameworks to design policies that build resilience and achieve policy objectives
  • Use the opportunity to receive feedback from the instructor

 

Who should attend?

  • Project officers would benefit from understanding how to apply resilience in their projects 
  • Senior executives would benefit from understanding how to promote resilience in your organisation 

Presenter

A picture of Dr Steven Lade
Steven Lade

Dr Steven Lade

Dr Steven Lade is a Researcher at the Stockholm Resilience Centre (Stockholm University) and an Honorary Senior Lecturer at the Fenner School of Environment and Society (The Australian National University). He is a world leader in the application of complex systems tools to understanding resilience. He lectures in complex systems, resilience, and dynamical systems theory.