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Journal ArticleDOI

Designing Resilient, Sustainable Systems

Joseph Fiksel
- 01 Dec 2003 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 23, pp 5330-5339
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TLDR
A design protocol is presented that involves the following steps: identifying system function and boundaries, establishing requirements, selecting appropriate technologies, developing a system design, evaluating anticipated performance, and devising a practical means for system deployment.
Abstract
Pursuit of sustainable development requires a systems approach to the design of industrial product and service systems. Although many business enterprises have adopted sustainability goals, the actual development of sustainable systems remains challenging because of the broad range of economic, environmental and social factors that need to be considered across the system life cycle. Traditional systems engineering practices try to anticipate and resist disruptions but may be vulnerable to unforeseen factors. An alternative is to design systems with inherent "resilience" bytaking advantage of fundamental properties such as diversity, efficiency, adaptability, and cohesion. Previous work on sustainable design has focused largely upon ecological efficiency improvements. For example, companies have found that reducing material and energy intensity and converting wastes into valuable secondary products creates value for shareholders as well as for society at large. To encourage broader systems thinking, a design protocol is presented that involves the following steps: identifying system function and boundaries, establishing requirements, selecting appropriate technologies, developing a system design, evaluating anticipated performance, and devising a practical means for system deployment. The approach encourages explicit consideration of resilience in both engineered systems and the larger systems in which they are embedded.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Resilience: the concept, a literature review and future directions

TL;DR: A review of resilience literature in its widest context and later its application at an organisational level context is provided in this article, where the origins of the concept are reported and consequently, the various fields of research are analysed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A metric and frameworks for resilience analysis of engineered and infrastructure systems

TL;DR: It is shown that the proposed resilience analysis framework and metric promote the development of methodologies for investigating “deep” uncertainties in resilience assessment while retaining the use of probability for expressing uncertainties about highly uncertain, unforeseeable, or unknowable hazards in design and management activities.

A Review on

Yang Wei-we
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed the features of the book of China's Informatization, and pointed out some deficiencies of this book, from the aspects of objective and realistic discussion, broad vision, frank opinion and proper system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generic metrics and quantitative approaches for system resilience as a function of time

TL;DR: Generic metrics and formulae for quantifying system resilience are proposed that are generic enough to be implemented in a variety of applications as long as appropriate figures-of-merit and the necessary system parameters, system decomposition and component parameters are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainability and resilience: toward a systems approach

TL;DR: A comprehensive systems approach is essential for effective decision-making with regard to global sustainability, since industrial, social, and ecological systems are closely linked as discussed by the authors, recognizing that steady-state sustainability models are simplistic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the Complexity of Economic, Ecological, and Social Systems

TL;DR: The phrase that combines the two, “sustainable development,” thus refers to the goal of fostering adaptive capabilities and creating opportunities, which is not an oxymoron but a term that describes a logical partnership.
Book

Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things

TL;DR: McDonough and Braungart as discussed by the authors argue that the one-way, 'cradle to grave' manufacturing model, dating to the Industrial Revolution, creates such fantastic amounts of waste and pollution in the first place.
Book

The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid

TL;DR: The Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP) market as discussed by the authors is the most exciting, fastest-growing new market in the world and it's where people least expect it: at the bottom of the pyramid.
Journal ArticleDOI

The diversity–stability debate

TL;DR: This issue — commonly referred to as the diversity–stability debate — is the subject of this review, which synthesizes historical ideas with recent advances and concludes that declines in diversity should be expected to accelerate the simplification of ecological communities.
Book

Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age

TL;DR: Duncan Watts explores the science of networks and its implications, ranging from the Dutch tulipmania of the 17th century to the success of Harry Potter, from the impact of September 11 on Manhattan to the brain of the sea-slug, and from the processes that lead to stockmarket crashes to the structure of the world wide web.
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