scispace - formally typeset
Book ChapterDOI

Flood risk communication

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The Flood Risk Science and Management provides an extensive and comprehensive synthesis of current research in flood management; providing a multi-disciplinary reference text covering a wide range of flood management topics.
Abstract
Approaches to avoid loss of life and limit disruption and damage from flooding have changed significantly in recent years. Worldwide, there has been a move from a strategy of flood defence to one of flood risk management. Flood risk management includes flood prevention using hard defences, where appropriate, but also requires that society learns to live with floods and that stakeholders living in flood prone areas develop coping strategies to increase their resilience to flood impacts when these occur. This change in approach represents a paradigm shift which stems from the realisation that continuing to strengthen and extend conventional flood defences is unsustainable economically, environmentally, and in terms of social equity. Flood risk management recognises that a sustainable approach must rest on integrated measures that reduce not only the probability of flooding, but also the consequences. This is essential as increases in the probability of inundation are inevitable in many areas of the world due to climate change, while socio–economic development will lead to spiralling increases in the consequences of flooding unless land use in floodplains is carefully planned. Flood Risk Science and Management provides an extensive and comprehensive synthesis of current research in flood management; providing a multi–disciplinary reference text covering a wide range of flood management topics. Its targeted readership is the international research community (from research students through to senior staff) and flood management professionals, such as engineers, planners, government officials and those with flood management responsibility in the public sector. By using the concept of case study chapters, international coverage is given to the topic, ensuring a world–wide relevance.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Flood-risk management, mapping, and planning: the institutional politics of decision support in England

TL;DR: The authors explored the institutional conflicts over the use of the Environment Agency (EA) Flood Map to support decision making by English local planning authorities (LPAs), whose local political mandate, statutory obligations, and professionalized planning culture put them at odds with the narrower bureaucratic imperative of the Agency to restrict developments at risk of flooding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Policy and systems of flood risk management: a comparative study between Japan and Spain

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison between two regions of different countries: Tokyo Metropolis (Japan) and Catalonia (Spain) is made based on flood damage data for a 30-year period (1981-2010), legislation, disaster management plans, recovering measures, and communication strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

More than a one-size-fits-all approach – tailoring flood risk communication to plural residents’ perspectives

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed how risk communication can improve disaster risk reduction by overcoming the expert-layperson gap, and applied Q methodology to identify four perspectives on flood risk communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating rapid assessment of flood proneness into urban planning under data constraints: a fuzzy logic and bricolage approach

TL;DR: In this article, a rapid data-constrained flood-proneness assessment (FPA) technique for the Kolkata Metropolitan Region (KMR) in India is proposed, and a conceptual urban-climate plan (UCP) framework capable of incorporating the FPA outputs into the mainstream planning process is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Microtopography and Alluvial Lowland Characteristics on Location and Development of Residential Areas in the Kuji River Basin of Japan

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of the microtopography and alluvial lowland characteristics on the location and development of residential areas in the Kuji River basin, Japan, is investigated using building density as the development indicator.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Amplification of Risk: A Conceptual Framework

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a conceptual framework that links the technical assessment of risk with psychological, sociological, and cultural perspectives of risk perception and risk-related behavior to amplify or attenuate public responses to the risk or risk event.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perceived risk, trust, and democracy

Paul Slovic
- 01 Dec 1993 - 
TL;DR: Risk management has become increasingly politicized and contentious, and polarized views, controversy, and overt conflict have become pervasive as discussed by the authors, which is a side effect of our remarkable form of participatory democracy, amplified by powerful technological and social changes that systematically destroy trust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk perception and communication unplugged: twenty years of process.

TL;DR: A personal (even confessional) history of the field over this period is offered and a series of developmental stages are identified, which involves consolidating the skills needed to execute it and learning its limitations.
Journal ArticleDOI

How can research organizations more effectively transfer research knowledge to decision makers

TL;DR: Five questions--What should be transferred to decision makers? To whom should it be transferred? By whom? How? With what effect?--provide an organizing framework for a knowledge transfer strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Knowledges in Context

TL;DR: This paper explore the relationships between "citizens" and "sources" between members and groups of the public and that diverse body of institutions, knowledges, and disciplinary specialists that we term science.
Related Papers (5)