As well as two blogs http://www.urbanresilienceresearch.net/2016/04/20/how-resilient-is-resilience and https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/keep-resilience-language-simple
Hola Federico, Here is an example of conceptual framework and application, taking into account three capacities of resilience, absorption capacity, adaptation and transformation, greetings.
kindly: Article Evaluación de la capacidad de resiliencia de sistemas de pro...
Greenhouse is attribuated to CO2 concentration increase in the atmosphere. Bisides CO2 emission due to human activities, there is also natural CO2 emission, for example that released from active volcanos or emanating from inactive volcanos. These represent very large amount of gases dissolved and trapped at the bottom of merometric crater lakes and then released into the atmosphere by natural sudden degassing. This phenomenon called lake return(Lake Nyos and Monoun Cameroun).
During disasters due to meromictic lakes overturning, the CO2 released instantly being heavier than air, flows down the mountainside like an avalanche instantly killing, on its way, thousands of people and an infinity of living beings. See:
Article Modelling gas–liquid flows in degassing risers used in extra...
Photo: The Lake Nyos Disaster in North-Western Cameroon (1986)
Dear Readers, The issue of National Water Security concerns drinking water supply but also food safety, linked to agricultural policy. Both rainfed and irrigated agriculture play complementary roles in food security, and the water issue implies a holistic view of water resources. To discuss this issue, I just started a discussion on water security and food security in arid countries:
(5) National Water Security in Water-Scarce Countries (researchgate.net)
Hi! Here is an application where we identified livelihood strategies and assessed the resilience of livestock farms in Spain using the dimensions of buffer capacity, learning capacity, self-organization, and diversity. I hope It can be useful!
Interesting to read this critical point of view on the agrarian situation at the dawn and the beginning of the independence of countries emerging from colonialism: "The Green Revolution and transversal countermovements: recovering alternative agronomic imaginaries in Tunisia and India, April 2022, Canadian journal of development studies. Abstract: This article outlines the visions of Tunisian and Indian dissident political thinkers and agronomists, 1950s–1980s, for decentralised food and farming systems using just technologies. Amidst ascendent US imperialism, these marginalised proposals opposed the Green Revolution model of agrarian development, illustrating broader postcolonial politics of defending political sovereignty and advancing to economic/technological sovereignty. Erasing these dissident voices enabled the legitimisation of the Green Revolution as an ‘inevitable’ way to ensure food security. We argue that recovering this intellectual history is critical to displace the techno-centric Green Revolution narrative, and to inform and support struggles for ecologically attuned alternatives that foreground agroecology. Read more on:
Article The Green Revolution and transversal countermovements: recov...
Comment: One can, at least for Tunisia, find the analysis of the historical context and the socio-political organization of agricultural administration and water and soil resources imprecise. We also speak of "dissident" thinkers. Who are they ? what about non-dissenting thinkers? and where should the line of political, economic, and social demarcation be placed?