An article by Tom Slater takes on several sacred cows of the current planning discussion, most prominently among them what he describes as “the anaesthetising spell of resilience.”
Slater’s article moves on from an initial discussion about the launch of the new Guardian Cities website to discuss what he describes as the rise of “an entire cottage industry on ‘resilient cities,’” which he sees as the next buzzword in a “sinister” lineage including new urbanism, sustainability, and regeneration.
According to Small: “The insidious work of urban resilience lies in the obvious and, to its proponents entirely logical policy suggestion the word carries: ‘urban dwellers of the world, brace yourselves for austerity [or environmental catastrophe] and everything will be fine in the end!’”
Among Small’s complaints about resilience: “As an analytic framework (if it can even be called that) ‘resilience’ studiously, perhaps even judiciously, ignores every important question about the contradictions of capital accumulation and circulation, about uneven development, about enabling political structures, about state strategies of ‘growth machine’ branding – I could go on.”
FULL STORY: The resilience of neoliberal urbanism

Analysis: Cybertruck Fatality Rate Far Exceeds That of Ford Pinto
The Tesla Cybertruck was recalled seven times last year.

National Parks Layoffs Will Cause Communities to Lose Billions
Thousands of essential park workers were laid off this week, just before the busy spring break season.

Retro-silient?: America’s First “Eco-burb,” The Woodlands Turns 50
A master-planned community north of Houston offers lessons on green infrastructure and resilient design, but falls short of its founder’s lofty affordability and walkability goals.

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Analysis: Cybertruck Fatality Rate Far Exceeds That of Ford Pinto
The Tesla Cybertruck was recalled seven times last year.

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