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The Resilience Dividend
2 recommendations

The Resilience Dividend

Being Strong in a World Where Things Go Wrong

by Judith Rodin

Recommended by Michael Bloomberg

Recommended by Michael Bloomberg

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Should I read this?

Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books and Nonfiction.

New York. Athens. Boston. Tohoku. Newtown. Oslo. West. Wenzhou. New Orleans. Dhaka. Moore. Nairobi.These communities are just a few among the many that have been hit hard by one of the wicked problems of todays world: natural catastrophe, disease and contagion, systems or social collapse. If you havent been directly touched by one of these disrupti...

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Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books and Nonfiction.

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M

Michael Bloomberg

Judith Rodin's groundbreaking work at the Rockefeller Foundation is helping cities adapt to a changing climate–and a changing world. In her new book, The Resilience Dividend, she lays out a powerful case for why governments and companies should prepare forand not just react to–disruptions to business as usual.

Appears In

Accidental Presidents
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Accidental Presidents offers eight narrative portraits of men who succeeded to the U.S. presidency without election, using anecdote-rich scenes and readable context to show how personality and circumstance interact with office power. It’s strongest as a set of self-contained stories that make succession stakes concrete for non-specialist readers; it does not prioritize dense archival argument or exhaustive methodology, so expect some interpretive generalizations and repeated themes across cases. Use it for fast historical orientation rather than scholarly deep-dives.

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Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.

The Resilience Dividend

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