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Mitigating mountain hazards in Austria – legislation, risk transfer, and awareness building

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present an overview of legislation related to natural hazards in Austria, with a particular focus on spatial planning activities and hazard mapping, and possible adaptations focussing on enhanced resilience.
Abstract
. Embedded in the overall concept of integral risk management, mitigating mountain hazards is pillared by land use regulations, risk transfer, and information. In this paper aspects on legislation related to natural hazards in Austria are summarised, with a particular focus on spatial planning activities and hazard mapping, and possible adaptations focussing on enhanced resilience are outlined. Furthermore, the system of risk transfer is discussed, highlighting the importance of creating incentives for risk-aware behaviour, above all with respect to individual precaution and insurance solutions. Therefore, the issue of creating awareness through information is essential, which is presented subsequently. The study results in recommendations of how administrative units on different federal and local levels could increase the enforcement of regulations related to the minimisation of natural hazard risk. Moreover, the nexus to risk transfer mechanisms is provided, focusing on the current compensation system in Austria and some possible adjustments in order to provide economic incentives for (private) investments in mitigation measures, i.e. local structural protection. These incentives should be supported by delivering information on hazard and risk target-oriented to any stakeholder involved. Therefore, coping strategies have to be adjusted and the interaction between prevention and precaution has to be highlighted. The paper closes with recommendations of how these efforts could be achieved, with a particular focus on the situation in the Republic of Austria.

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Assessing physical vulnerability for multi-hazards using an indicator-based methodology

TL;DR: In this article, an indicator-based vulnerability approach, the Papathoma Tsunami Vulnerability Assessment (PTVA), was further developed to be applicable in a multi-hazard context.
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Physical vulnerability assessment for alpine hazards: state of the art and future needs

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of existing methods for vulnerability assessment related to mountain hazards is presented, where the authors identify difficulties in their implementation (data availability, time consumption) and differences between them regarding their scale, the consideration of the hazardous phenomenon and its properties, the importance of important vulnerability indicators and the use of technology such as GIS and remote sensing, and identify the future needs in the field of vulnerability assessment that include the user-friendliness of the method, the selection of all the relevant indicators, the transferability, the inclusion of information concerning the hazard itself, the
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Susceptibility versus resilience to mountain hazards in Austria - paradigms of vulnerability revisited

TL;DR: In this article, issues determining structural, economic, institutional and social vulnerability are discussed with respect to mountain hazards in Austria, and different approaches are applied by using a vulnerability-of-place criterion, and key issues of vulnerability are reconsidered aiming at a general illustration of the situation in a densely populated mountain region of Europe.
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Climate change and geomorphological hazards in the eastern European Alps

TL;DR: This paper presents two case studies (2003 heatwave, 2005 floods) that demonstrate some of the interlinkages between physical processes and human activity in climatically sensitive alpine regions that are responding to ongoing climate change and outlines future implications of climate change on mountain environments and its impact on hazards and hazard management in paraglacial mountain systems.
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