Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness

Wilderness is commonly understood as referring to areas significantly untouched by human modifications, even if indigenous peoples may have lived in these areas. In economically developed countries, wilderness also refers to “land where development is prohibited by law,” for a variety of reasons—aes...

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Main Author: Brazal, Agnes M.
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2022
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/5818
https://www.academia.edu/22838755/Resilience_Virtue_in_the_Unexpected_Wilderness
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-66672022-05-17T08:48:05Z Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness Brazal, Agnes M. Wilderness is commonly understood as referring to areas significantly untouched by human modifications, even if indigenous peoples may have lived in these areas. In economically developed countries, wilderness also refers to “land where development is prohibited by law,” for a variety of reasons—aesthetic, biological, recreational, cultural, and scientific. The US Wilderness Act of 1964 further qualifies, that humans could have been in these places but only as a transient visitor. In the 21st century, a shift in wilderness theory occurred with the realization that wilderness cannot be defined by physical boundaries, since all landscapes are connected: climate change, for example, affects the national parks and other “protected” wilderness areas. Furthermore, wilderness ecosystems, like all ecosystems, are no longer thought to be static or stable, but instead are dynamic and in constant flu+* thus we need to re-evaluate what wilderness preservation means. The context of this essay, however, is another type of “unexpected wilderness.” From an anthropocentric perspective, it is the wilderness that suddenly encroaches upon our existence; or from an ecocentric standpoint, it could be described as nature taking back its own (e.g., nature taking over coasts that should have been populated with mangroves and not peoples; or flood plains that should not have been made the site of subdivisions). This is the return of wilderness due to nature-related disasters—and these disasters are bound to increase with climate change. 2022-05-25T09:27:58Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/5818 https://www.academia.edu/22838755/Resilience_Virtue_in_the_Unexpected_Wilderness Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Disasters Climatic changes Wilderness areas Wilderness area monitoring Resilience (Ecology) Environmental Studies
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Disasters
Climatic changes
Wilderness areas
Wilderness area monitoring
Resilience (Ecology)
Environmental Studies
spellingShingle Disasters
Climatic changes
Wilderness areas
Wilderness area monitoring
Resilience (Ecology)
Environmental Studies
Brazal, Agnes M.
Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
description Wilderness is commonly understood as referring to areas significantly untouched by human modifications, even if indigenous peoples may have lived in these areas. In economically developed countries, wilderness also refers to “land where development is prohibited by law,” for a variety of reasons—aesthetic, biological, recreational, cultural, and scientific. The US Wilderness Act of 1964 further qualifies, that humans could have been in these places but only as a transient visitor. In the 21st century, a shift in wilderness theory occurred with the realization that wilderness cannot be defined by physical boundaries, since all landscapes are connected: climate change, for example, affects the national parks and other “protected” wilderness areas. Furthermore, wilderness ecosystems, like all ecosystems, are no longer thought to be static or stable, but instead are dynamic and in constant flu+* thus we need to re-evaluate what wilderness preservation means. The context of this essay, however, is another type of “unexpected wilderness.” From an anthropocentric perspective, it is the wilderness that suddenly encroaches upon our existence; or from an ecocentric standpoint, it could be described as nature taking back its own (e.g., nature taking over coasts that should have been populated with mangroves and not peoples; or flood plains that should not have been made the site of subdivisions). This is the return of wilderness due to nature-related disasters—and these disasters are bound to increase with climate change.
format text
author Brazal, Agnes M.
author_facet Brazal, Agnes M.
author_sort Brazal, Agnes M.
title Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
title_short Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
title_full Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
title_fullStr Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
title_full_unstemmed Resilience: Virtue in the unexpected wilderness
title_sort resilience: virtue in the unexpected wilderness
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2022
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/5818
https://www.academia.edu/22838755/Resilience_Virtue_in_the_Unexpected_Wilderness
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