ISBN:
9781800379534
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (192 Seiten)
,
24 cm
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
DDC:
363.34932
Keywords:
Floods Risk assessment
;
Flood control
;
flood control
Abstract:
"This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 License. It is free to read, download and share at Elgaronline. Centralising the role of land and landowners, Spatial Flood Risk Management brings together knowledge from socio-economy, public policy, hydrology, geomorphology, and engineering to establish an interdisciplinary knowledge base on spatial approaches to managing flood risks. Discussing key barriers and sharing evidence-based best practices to flood risk management, international contributors involved in the LAND4FLOOD EU COST action initiative (CA16209) seek transferrable solutions to the implementation challenges of nature-based solutions. Introducing the concept of spatial flood risk management, the multi-national teams of authors consider the notion of land through three analytical lenses: as a biophysical system, a socio-economic resource, and a solution to flood risk management. Advocating for a more comprehensive approach, the book explores options of where and how to store water within catchments, including decentralized water retention in the hinterland, flood storage along rivers, and planned flooding in resilient cities. Bringing together the existing knowledge on the relation between flood risk management and land with an international and interdisciplinary scope, this book will prove invaluable to academics, policy makers and public authorities involved in flood risk management, urban planners, and governing environmental bodies"--
Description / Table of Contents:
Contents: Foreword / Sally Priest Acknowledgement -- 1. Introduction to spatial flood risk management: Implementing catchment-based retention and resilience on private land / Thomas Hartmann, Lenka Slavíková and Mark E. Wilkinson -- Part I: Water retention in the hinterland -- 2. Nature-based solutions for flow reduction in catchment headwaters / Mary Bourke, Mark E. Wilkinson and Zorica Srdjevic -- 3. Legal challenges of restricting land use for natural flood protection in the hinterland / Juliane Albrecht and Sofija Nikolić Popadić -- 4. Implementation of measures in the hinterland: Transaction costs and economic instruments / Gábor Ungvári and Dennis Collentine -- Part II: Flood storage along rivers -- 5. Technical and hydrological effects across scales and thresholds of polders, dams and levees / Reinhard Pohl and Nejc Bezak -- 6. Financial compensation and legal restrictions for using land for flood retention / Andras Kis, Arthur Schindelegger and Vesna Zupanc -- 7. Upstream-downstream schemes and their instruments / Thomas Hartmann, Lukas Löschner and Jan Machác̆ -- Part III: Resilient cities -- 8. Individual measures for adaptive cities / Christin Rinnert, Thomas Thaler and Robert Jüpner -- 9. Institutionalizing the resilient city: Constraints and opportunities / Rares Halbac-Cotoara-Zamfir and Barbara Tempels -- 10. The role of risk transfer and spatial planning for enhancing the flood resilience of cities / Paul Hudson and Lenka Slavíková -- Part IV: Conclusion -- 11. Challenges of spatial flood risk management / Thomas Hartmann, Lenka Slavíková and Mark E. Wilkinson -- Index.
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index
DOI:
10.4337/9781800379534
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