Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge

Globalization as progress of economic development has increased population socioeconomical vulnerability when unequal wealth distribution within economic development process constitutes the main rule, with widening the gap between rich and poors by environmental pricing. Econological vulnerability i...

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Autor principal: Woloszyn, Philippe
Formato: Documento de conferencia publishedVersion
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.memoria.fahce.unlp.edu.ar/trab_eventos/ev.2698/ev.2698.pdf
Aporte de:
id I19-R125-Jev2698
record_format dspace
institution Universidad Nacional de La Plata
institution_str I-19
repository_str R-125
collection Memoria Académica - FaHCE (UNLP)
language Inglés
orig_language_str_mv eng
topic Geografía
spellingShingle Geografía
Woloszyn, Philippe
Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
topic_facet Geografía
description Globalization as progress of economic development has increased population socioeconomical vulnerability when unequal wealth distribution within economic development process constitutes the main rule, with widening the gap between rich and poors by environmental pricing. Econological vulnerability is therefore increasing too, as dangerous substance and techniques should produce polluted effluents and industrial or climatic risk increasing (Woloszyn, Quenault, Faburel, 2012). To illustrate and model this process, we propose to introduce an analogical induction-model to describe both vulnerability situations and associated resilience procedures. At this aim, we first develop a well-known late 80?s model of socio-economic crack-up, known as 'Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars', which presents economics as a social extension of natural energy systems. This last, also named 'E-model', is constituted by three passive components, potential energy, kinetic energy, and energy dissipation, thus allowing economical data to be treated as a thermodynamical system. To extend this model to social and ecological sustainability pillars, we propose to built an extended E(Economic)-S(Social)-O(Organic) model, based on the three previous components, as an open model considering feedbacks as evolution sources. An applicative illustration of this model will then be described, through this summer's american severe drought event analysis
format Documento de conferencia
Documento de conferencia
publishedVersion
author Woloszyn, Philippe
author_facet Woloszyn, Philippe
author_sort Woloszyn, Philippe
title Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
title_short Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
title_full Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
title_fullStr Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
title_full_unstemmed Territorial Intelligence of Vulnerability Systems 2- Sustainable Modelling of Globalization Challenge
title_sort territorial intelligence of vulnerability systems 2- sustainable modelling of globalization challenge
publishDate 2012
url https://www.memoria.fahce.unlp.edu.ar/trab_eventos/ev.2698/ev.2698.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT woloszynphilippe territorialintelligenceofvulnerabilitysystems2sustainablemodellingofglobalizationchallenge
bdutipo_str Repositorios
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