Toward more flood resilience: Is a diversification of flood risk management strategies the way forward?

European countries face increasing flood risks because of urbanization, increase of exposure and damage potential, and the effects of climate change. In literature and in practice, it is argued that a diversification of strategies for flood risk management (FRM), including flood risk prevention (through proactive spatial planning), flood defense, flood risk mitigation, flood preparation, and flood recovery, makes countries more flood resilient. Although this thesis is plausible, it should still be empirically scrutinized. We aim to do this. Drawing on existing literature we operationalize the... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Dries L. T. Hegger
Peter P. J. Driessen
Mark Wiering
Helena F. M. W. van Rijswick
Zbigniew W. Kundzewicz
Piotr Matczak
Ann Crabbé
G. Tom. Raadgever
Marloes H. N. Bakker
Sally J. Priest
Corinne Larrue
Kristina Ek
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Reihe/Periodikum: Ecology and Society, Vol 21, Iss 4, p 52 (2016)
Verlag/Hrsg.: Resilience Alliance
Schlagwörter: Belgium / capacity to absorb and recover / capacity to resist / capacity to transform and adapt / comparison / diversification of flood risk management strategies / England / Europe / evaluation / flood risk governance / France / the Netherlands / Poland / resilience / Sweden / Biology (General) / QH301-705.5 / Ecology / QH540-549.5
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27190136
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-08854-210452

European countries face increasing flood risks because of urbanization, increase of exposure and damage potential, and the effects of climate change. In literature and in practice, it is argued that a diversification of strategies for flood risk management (FRM), including flood risk prevention (through proactive spatial planning), flood defense, flood risk mitigation, flood preparation, and flood recovery, makes countries more flood resilient. Although this thesis is plausible, it should still be empirically scrutinized. We aim to do this. Drawing on existing literature we operationalize the notion of "flood resilience" into three capacities: capacity to resist; capacity to absorb and recover; and capacity to transform and adapt. Based on findings from the EU FP7 project STAR-FLOOD, we explore the degree of diversification of FRM strategies and related flood risk governance arrangements at the national level in Belgium, England, France, the Netherlands, Poland, and Sweden, as well as these countries' achievement in terms of the three capacities. We found that the Netherlands and to a lesser extent Belgium have a strong capacity to resist, France a strong capacity to absorb and recover, and especially England a high capacity to transform and adapt. Having a diverse portfolio of FRM strategies in place may be conducive to high achievements related to the capacities to absorb/recover and to transform and adapt. Hence, we conclude that diversification of FRM strategies contributes to resilience. However, the diversification thesis should be nuanced in the sense that there are different ways to be resilient. First, the three capacities imply different rationales and normative starting points for flood risk governance, the choice between which is inherently political. Second, we found trade-offs between the three capacities, e.g., being resistant seems to lower the possibility to be absorbent. Third, to explain countries' achievements in terms of resilience, the strategies' feasibility in specific physical ...