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About the podcast

The subject of resilience has gained increasing attention across a range of contexts and fields of application over the last decade, to include infrastructure, climate change, natural hazards, cyber security, public health, personal health and wellbeing, supply chains, and social and/or community resilience.  The Resilient Futures Podcast (formerly the Future Cities Podcast) explores the nature, characteristics, and factors contributing to the resilience of systems.  The role of nature in supporting system resilience will be one of multiple foundational themes which will also include systems thinking, interdisciplinarity, integrative solutions, etc., and fostering ideas across sectors and perspectives.

Hosted by Alysha Helmrich and Todd Bridges

Produced by Sarah Buckleitner

To learn more, suggest a topic or get in touch, contact production manager Sarah Buckleitner: sarah.buckleitner@uga.edu

In IRIS News

  • Behind the City Scenes: Why You Should Get to Know Your Local Infrastructure

    Behind the City Scenes: Why You Should Get to Know Your Local Infrastructure

    Our most recent Resilient Futures Podcast episode is live, featuring Sybil Derrible, professor of civil engineering at the University of Illinois and host Alysha Helmrich. Listen here. Podcast description: Have you ever asked your garbage truck where it’s going? Sybil Derrible is a professor of civil engineering at the University of Illinois Chicago, focusing on…

  • Protecting Georgia from Disasters Requires State-Led Coordination  

    Protecting Georgia from Disasters Requires State-Led Coordination  

    New University of Georgia Institute for Resilient Infrastructure Systems report provides steps to make Georgia more resilient   ATHENS, GA – When Hurricane Helene swept across Georgia in 2024 and left devastation in its wake–including an estimated $6.4 billion in agricultural and timber losses–it underscored a fine point: that communities are increasingly threatened by natural hazards…

  • New Resilient Futures Podcast: How America’s Historical Calamities Inform Emergency Response Today

    New Resilient Futures Podcast: How America’s Historical Calamities Inform Emergency Response Today

    Cynthia Kierner, historian, self-declared “non-21st century person,” and Mets fan, is deeply interested in the role of disturbances across American history- hurricanes, earthquakes, and disease, oh my. In her book, Inventing Disaster: The Culture of Calamity from the Jamestown Colony to the Johnstown Flood, she reviews the history of natural disasters and how we respond…