Savannah Cox
University of California, Berkeley
12 Papers
Savannah Cox is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Miami & Resilience (network). The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Racializing Resilience: Assemblage, Critique, and Contested Futures in Greater Miami Resilience Planning
TL;DR: In this article, the authors respond to the following paradox: as government actors have begun to operationalize resilience in a variety of ways and contexts, critical analyses of resilience have continued to sid...
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Governing urban resilience: Insurance and the problematization of climate change
Stephen J. Collier,Savannah Cox +1 more
TL;DR: The authors examines the growing importance of private insurance in urban resilience, drawing on research in three US cities that are bellwethers of climate adaptation: New Orleans, New York and Gre...
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Designing justice? Race and the limits of recognition in greater Miami resilience planning
TL;DR: The authors explored the relation between resilience, justice and recognition through a case study of resilience planning in the Greater Miami Region and found that resilience initiatives extend the structures of anti-Black violence through efforts to address the region's extreme racial and economic inequalities in the name of equity.
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Inscriptions of resilience: Bond ratings and the government of climate risk in Greater Miami, Florida:
TL;DR: In recent years, credit rating agencies have begun to incorporate a municipality's resilience and vulnerability to climate change into their US municipal bond rating methods as mentioned in this paper, drawing on the case of...
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Interventions on design and political geography
Kevin Grove,Maroš Krivý,Lauren Rickards,Gabriele Schliwa,Stephen J. Collier,Savannah Cox,Matthew Gandy +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus political geographic attention on design as a form of governing emergent futures in the urbanized world of the Anthropocene, and explore how political geographic thought might shine new light on the variety of contemporary efforts to know, manage and resist efforts to govern through complexity and uncertainty that fall under the umbrella of "design".
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