Digital Resilience for the Climate Crisis : A Multi-Perspective Analysis

Boh, Wai Fong and Melville, Nigel P. and Baptista, João and Chasin, Friedrich and Horita, Flavio and Ixmeier, Anne and Johnson, Steven L. and Sarker, Suprateek and Ketter, Wolfgang and Kranz, Johann and Miranda, Shaila and Nan, Ning and Pentland, Brian T. and Recker, Jan and Sadeghi, Sepide and Sarker, Saonee and Sutanto, Juliana and Wang, Ping and Wilopo, Wahyu (2025) Digital Resilience for the Climate Crisis : A Multi-Perspective Analysis. MIS Quarterly. pp. 1-38. ISSN 0276-7783

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Abstract

This commentary explores multiple perspectives on the potential use of digital technologies to improve organizational resilience in the context of climate change. Such an approach is needed to address this complex problem space, especially since it encompasses a wide variety of phenomena, including floods and landslides, disruptions to global supply chains, heat waves, biodiversity loss, greenhouse gas emissions, and food insecurity. We assembled a diverse set of five scholarly teams specializing in multiple problem topics, research approaches, and theoretical perspectives on this project. Each team identified and problematized a specific facet of digital resilience for the climate crisis. The perspectives cover a range of rich narratives, including digital resilience in the context of floods and landslides in Brazil and Indonesia; conceptual development efforts incorporating the natural environment with people and technology; reconceptualization of the problem space in terms of time and type; and two applications of digital resilience in the domains of global supply chains and carbon emissions tracking. This research commentary thus presents a multi-perspective examination and interrogation of digital resilience for addressing climate crisis, out of which four transcending themes emerge: the need to integrate nature into sociotechnical thinking, to examine actions at both micro and macro levels, to include both reactive and proactive strategies, and to view climate crisis as a process rather than a series of events. This commentary aims to motivate other scholars who take diverse theoretical perspectives to join us in developing fundamental knowledge and practical solutions needed to achieve digital resilience for the climate crisis.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
MIS Quarterly
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_internally_funded
Subjects:
?? yes - internally fundedmanagement information systemsinformation systems and managementinformation systemscomputer science applications ??
ID Code:
232888
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
08 Oct 2025 10:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
08 Oct 2025 22:25