S
Sulfikar Amir
Researcher at Nanyang Technological University
Publications - 31
Citations - 577
Sulfikar Amir is an academic researcher from Nanyang Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sociotechnical system & Resilience (network). The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 28 publications receiving 406 citations. Previous affiliations of Sulfikar Amir include ETH Zurich & Bandung Institute of Technology.
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Sociotechnical agendas : Reviewing future directions for energy and climate research
Benjamin K. Sovacool,David J. Hess,Sulfikar Amir,Frank W. Geels,Richard F. Hirsh,Leandro Rodriguez Medina,Clark A. Miller,Carla Alvial Palavicino,Roopali Phadke,Marianne Ryghaug,Johan Schot,Anntii Silvast,Jennie C. Stephens,Andrew Stirling,Bruno Turnheim,Erik van der Vleuten,Harro van Lente,Steven Yearley +17 more
TL;DR: The sociotechnical concepts or tools from science and technology studies (STS) are useful at better understanding energy-related social science, to reflect on prominent themes and topics within those approaches, and to identify current research gaps and directions for the future as mentioned in this paper.
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Sociotechnical Resilience: A Preliminary Concept.
Sulfikar Amir,Vivek Kant +1 more
TL;DR: This article presents the concept of sociotechnical resilience by employing an interdisciplinary perspective derived from the fields of science and technology studies, human factors, safety science, organizational studies, and systems engineering.
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A multilevel framework to enhance organizational resilience
TL;DR: Organizational resilience is a capacity that emerges at multiple levels of an organization as discussed by the authors, and although the multilevel character of organizations has been generally acknowledged in existing organizational studies, there...
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Informational capital and disaster resilience: the case of Jalin Merapi
Justyna Tasic,Sulfikar Amir +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study focusing on the 2010 eruption of Merapi volcano in Central Java, Indonesia, is presented to analyze the emergence of disaster response fully organized by grassroots groups in Yogyakarta.
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Rethinking Design Policy in the Third World
TL;DR: The "ideology" of design as problem solving drives designers and design scholars to think about how design can contribute to helping Third World societies as mentioned in this paper, and the "Design for Need" conference in April 1976 represented the international design community's general awareness of design's responsibility in contemporary society.