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19winter
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optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
The world is facing increasing risks as
globalization connects people, economies,
and ecosystems. Globally, the number
of people exposed to floods each year is
increasing at a higher rate than population
growth. People are drawn to live on
flood plains partly because of economic
opportunity. However, it is increasingly
recognized that communities cannot
totally avoid risks.
To date, the development and the disaster
risk management (DRM) communities have
relied on a mix of interventions to help
communities cope with flooding: “hard”
interventions like building a dam or flood
evacuation routes and, to a much lesser
extent, “smart and soft” interventions
like land use planning, insurance, and
early-warning systems.
Flood risk management is dominated
by single interventions, many of which
fail to meet their objectives because they
do not consider the wider socioeconomic
system within which they operate. In some
instances interventions can even be counter
productive for resilience, inadvertently
undermining development or actually
increasing risk in another way.
The Flood Resilience Alliance is using
a participatory and iterative approach
to develop sustainable portfolios of
interventions that tackle both flood risk and
development objectives in synergy.
Says Adriana Keating, IIASA’s Flood
Resilience Alliance project manager,
“The strategies communities use to
pursue their development and wellbeing
objectives have a profound impact on risk. Likewise, the way a community approaches
its disaster risk has a profound impact on
development and wellbeing. The trick is to
get these two working in a virtuous cycle,
rather than undermining each other.”
Mechler explains, “A proper understanding
of resilience in qualitative and quantitative
terms has been lacking in resilience
research to date. Arguably, this is why
there has been little concrete, measurable
progress on the ground. The new initiative
focuses on benchmarking and tracking the
underlying sources of resilience and the
long-term outcomes.”
For the flood-prone communities
involved in the study, this means shedding
light on why one community may fare better
than another in the same disaster, despite
seemingly identical levels of development
and vulnerability.
According to Keating, “With the informa-
tion and resources acquired in this work, communities will not just be able to
bounce back after a disaster. They’ll be
able to actually bounce forward in terms
of making progress on important develop-
ment objectives, such as increasing and
strengthening livelihoods, and building
requisite infrastructure.” KP
Further info Keating A, Campbell K, Mechler R,
Michek-Kerjan E, Mochizuki J, Kunreuther H, Bayer J,
Hanger S, McCallum I, See L, Williges K, Atreya A,
Botzen W, Collier B, Czajkowski J, Hochrainer-Stigler S,
Egan C (2014). Operationalizing Resilience Against
Natural Disaster Risk: Opportunities, Barriers, and a Way
Forward. White Paper, Zurich Flood Resilience Alliance.
§ Kundzewicz ZW, Kanae S, Seneviratne SI, Handmer J,
Nicholls N, PeduzziÂ
P, MechlerÂ
R, Bouwer LM, Arnell N,
Mach K, Muir-Wood R, Brakenridge GR, Kron W,
BenitoÂ
G, Honda Y, Takahashi K, Sherstyukov B (2014).
Flood risk and climate change: Global and regional
perspectives. Hydrological Sciences Journal 59(1):1–28
[doi:10.1080/02626667.2013.857411].
§ www.iiasa.ac.at/Flood-Resilience
Reinhard Mechler mechler@iiasa.ac.at
Adriana Keating keatinga@iiasa.ac.at
WhAt IS reSIlIeNce?
Resilience has a rich history and multiple interpretations. Used widely in engineering,
psychology, and economics, it was brought to IIASA by C.S. Holling in 1973 for application to
ecological systems. The centrality of “shocks” to the concept has made resilience an appealing
concept in the disasters field where it has proliferated in recent years.
IIASA researchers conceptualize disaster resilience as, “the ability of a system, community,
or society to pursue its social, ecological, and economic development and growth objectives,
while managing its disaster risk over time in a mutually reinforcing way.” This understanding
of resilience stresses that a resilient community is one that can not only survive and recover
from disaster events, but actually thrive in the face of these events and continue to strive
toward new opportunities as risks change.
The project’s approach to resilience is to focus on the outcomes of actions for people’s
wellbeing. Wellbeing goes beyond wealth to encompass the social, human, environmental,
physical, and financial capitals and capacities which make up the community system. +
the ImperAtIve: FrOm rISk AvOIdANce tO lIvING WIth rISkS
forward Geographic centers of the
more than 3,700 large floods
observedÂ
globally from 1985 to 2010.
Many of these floods hit key loci of
socioeconomic development. Future
socioeconomic and climatic changes
are expected to exacerbate flooding
and undermine human wellbeing.
Source: Kundzewicz et al. (2014)
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Buch options, Band winter 2014/2015"
options
Band winter 2014/2015
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2014/2015
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2014
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine