This book details the impact of flooding on our environment, and the ways in which communities, and those that work with them, can act to manage the associated risks.
Flooding is an increasingly significant environmental hazard which inflicts major costs to the economies and livelihoods of developed countries. This book explores how local communities can identify, manage, and adapt to the ever-increasing damage flooding causes. Focusing on the future role of local communities, the benefits and challenges of their involvement, and the potential areas of transformation, this book provides insights into the efficacy of interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary working. Alongside research into similar environmental hazards, this book also draws upon the author's own knowledge of flood risk management in distinctive non-contiguous interdisciplinary settings. The chapters draw together a different and distinctive set of interdisciplinary themes in flood risk management and social resilience. In doing so, it strives to communicate the different ways of thinking that can usefully contribute to flood risk management.
This book would be ideal for those researching flood risk management, alongside scholars and non-scholars alike who are interested in finding ways of adapting to environmental hazards working with local communities.
Chapter 1. Interdisciplinary explorations in communities and their resilience to changing flood risk: an introduction
Chapter 2. Different types of floods and diverse communities: interactions, impacts and management at local level
Chapter 3. Flood hazard perception, awareness and action: from individual to community?
Chapter 4. Different flood knowledges: conflict or integration?
Chapter 5. Linking flood heritage and local community resilience
Chapter 6. Communicating flood science for community resilience
Chapter 7. Flood management strategies and their relation to community awareness and action
Chapter 8. Community participation and agency in local flood risk management
Chapter 9. Community learning for flood resilience: strategies and pitfalls
Chapter 10. Community resilience to flood risk: futures, challenges and opportunities
Lindsey McEwen is Professor of Environmental Management and Director of the Centre for Water, Communities and Resilience, at the University of the West of England, Bristol, UK.