H
Hazel P. Faulkner
Researcher at Middlesex University
Publications - 45
Citations - 1557
Hazel P. Faulkner is an academic researcher from Middlesex University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Flood myth & Erosion. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1412 citations. Previous affiliations of Hazel P. Faulkner include University of Hertfordshire & University of North London.
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Perspectives on social capacity building for natural hazards: outlining an emerging field of research and practice in Europe
Christian Kuhlicke,Annett Steinführer,Chloe Begg,Chiara Bianchizza,Michael Bründl,Matthias Buchecker,Bruna De Marchi,Marina Di Masso Tarditti,Corina Höppner,Blaž Komac,Louis Lemkow,Jochen Luther,Simon McCarthy,Luigi Pellizzoni,Ortwin Renn,Anna Scolobig,Meera Supramaniam,Sue M. Tapsell,Gisela Wachinger,Gordon Walker,Rebecca Whittle,Matija Zorn,Hazel P. Faulkner +22 more
TL;DR: In this article, a heuristic model of social capacity building for natural hazards is developed by taking into account a wide range of existing expertise from different fields of research, with particular attention paid to social vulnerability and its assessment, as well as to risk communication and risk education.
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Developing a Translational Discourse to Communicate Uncertainty in Flood Risk between Science and the Practitioner
TL;DR: The rationale for a pragmatic semiotics of risk communication between scientists developing flood models and forecasts and those professional groups who are the receptors for flood risk estimates and warnings in the UK is developed.
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The causes of piping in a set of abandoned agricultural terraces in southeast Spain
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify some of the factors contributing to the piping process in abandoned terraces in seven sites located in the Murcia Region (southeast Spain) and conclude that terracing which is intended as a conservation practice has, in dispersive materials, actually enhanced piping, leading to the abandonment of farming.
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The influence of physico-chemical material properties on erosion processes in the badlands of Basilicata, Southern Italy
TL;DR: A detailed field investigation of the pedological, textural, mineralogical and geochemical properties of the clay-rich terrains widely outcropping in two selected badland field sites (the Fossa Bradanica area and the Bacino di Sant'Arcangelo) was undertaken to further elucidate process variability across the complex site.
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Connectivity as a crucial determinant of badland morphology and evolution
TL;DR: In this paper, a meso-scale closed system model for the evolution of connected states in regionally isolated badlands is developed, applicable to systems evolving towards a fixed base level within a less erosive "host" landscape.