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Table of contents; 1 Introduction: New Perspectives on Resilience in Socio-Economic Spheres; Acknowledgements; Part I THE SOCIAL SCIENCE PERSPECTIVE; 2 The Notion of Resilience: Trajectories and Social Science Perspective; 1 Traditional lines of resilience; 2 Between shock and creeping threat
Benchmarks of resilience; 3 Disaster-Management, resilience cycle and the question about resilience's core; 4 "Simple" versus "reflexive resilience"
Variants of social resilience; References; 3 Resilience in Catastrophes, Disasters and Emergencies. Socio-scientific Perspectives; 1 Introduction
2 Tracing Back Resilience in Disaster Research2.1 Resilience in Ecology and Social-Ecological Systems; 2.2 The Detour through Vulnerability Research; 3 The Original Potential of Resilience; 4 Resilience in Catastrophes, Disasters and Emergencies; 4.1 Resilience in Emergencies; 4.2 Resilience in Disasters; 4.3 Resilience in Catastrophes; 5 The Legacy of Resilience; References; Part II RESILIENCE IN THE ECONOMIC SPHERE: THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE; 4 Resilient Financial Systems: Methodological and Theoretical Challenges of Post-Crisis Reform; 1 Introduction: The question
2 Resilience and political intervention3 Political intervention and knowledge; 4 The resilience of banks; 5 Resilience as "financial soundness"; 6 Analysis; References; 5 In Search of the Golden Factor: Conceptualizing Resilience in the Framework of New Economic Sociology by Focusing 'Loyalty'; 1 The classical view: in search of resilient individuals or systems; 2 New theoretical considerations: social resilience; 2.1 Sociological research on resilience; 2.2 Action-based explanations: linking social actors to social factors; 3 Resilience in the framework of new economic sociology
3.1 Loyalty as social factor3.2 Social resilience factors in economy: an overview; 3.3 Loyalty: a socio-cultural factor within economy; 3.3.1 Loyalty as a social-cultural resource in a performance decrease; 3.3.2 Loyalty in the framework of new economic sociology; 3.3.3 Social resilience factors in the economic region of Baden-Wuerttemberg after 2008; 3.4 Social resilience in economy; 4 Conclusions; References; 6 Consumer Organisations and the Social Resilience of Markets; 1 Introduction; 2 Markets as Social Structures; 3 Consumer Organisations and Markets
3.1 Federal Associations of Consumer Centers and the Federation of German Consumer organisations3.2 Stiftung Warentest; 3.3 Utopia; 3.4 Foodwatch; 4 Consumer Organisations and the Social Resilience of Markets; References; Part III RESILIENCE IN THE SOCIAL SPHERE: THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE; 7 Responses to Discrimination and Social Resilience Under Neoliberalism. The United States Compared; African Americans Experiencing and Responding to Stigmatization; National Responses Compared; The United States: Other Repertoires; African American Collective Identity
Benchmarks of resilience; 3 Disaster-Management, resilience cycle and the question about resilience's core; 4 "Simple" versus "reflexive resilience"
Variants of social resilience; References; 3 Resilience in Catastrophes, Disasters and Emergencies. Socio-scientific Perspectives; 1 Introduction
2 Tracing Back Resilience in Disaster Research2.1 Resilience in Ecology and Social-Ecological Systems; 2.2 The Detour through Vulnerability Research; 3 The Original Potential of Resilience; 4 Resilience in Catastrophes, Disasters and Emergencies; 4.1 Resilience in Emergencies; 4.2 Resilience in Disasters; 4.3 Resilience in Catastrophes; 5 The Legacy of Resilience; References; Part II RESILIENCE IN THE ECONOMIC SPHERE: THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE; 4 Resilient Financial Systems: Methodological and Theoretical Challenges of Post-Crisis Reform; 1 Introduction: The question
2 Resilience and political intervention3 Political intervention and knowledge; 4 The resilience of banks; 5 Resilience as "financial soundness"; 6 Analysis; References; 5 In Search of the Golden Factor: Conceptualizing Resilience in the Framework of New Economic Sociology by Focusing 'Loyalty'; 1 The classical view: in search of resilient individuals or systems; 2 New theoretical considerations: social resilience; 2.1 Sociological research on resilience; 2.2 Action-based explanations: linking social actors to social factors; 3 Resilience in the framework of new economic sociology
3.1 Loyalty as social factor3.2 Social resilience factors in economy: an overview; 3.3 Loyalty: a socio-cultural factor within economy; 3.3.1 Loyalty as a social-cultural resource in a performance decrease; 3.3.2 Loyalty in the framework of new economic sociology; 3.3.3 Social resilience factors in the economic region of Baden-Wuerttemberg after 2008; 3.4 Social resilience in economy; 4 Conclusions; References; 6 Consumer Organisations and the Social Resilience of Markets; 1 Introduction; 2 Markets as Social Structures; 3 Consumer Organisations and Markets
3.1 Federal Associations of Consumer Centers and the Federation of German Consumer organisations3.2 Stiftung Warentest; 3.3 Utopia; 3.4 Foodwatch; 4 Consumer Organisations and the Social Resilience of Markets; References; Part III RESILIENCE IN THE SOCIAL SPHERE: THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE; 7 Responses to Discrimination and Social Resilience Under Neoliberalism. The United States Compared; African Americans Experiencing and Responding to Stigmatization; National Responses Compared; The United States: Other Repertoires; African American Collective Identity