A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
The role of local stakeholder participation in flood defence decisions in the United Kingdom and Germany
An important aspect of integrated flood risk management (FRM) around the world is accepted as being the involvement of a range of stakeholders in flood‐related decision‐making processes. Achieving local stakeholder participation in ways that lead to the expected benefits is burdened by challenges and difficulties. By drawing on examples of practices of local stakeholder participation in FRM in two European countries, the United Kingdom and Germany, this paper aims to understand the extent to which local stakeholders are able to influence FRM. Empirically, the paper focuses on flood defence planning and implementation‐related decisions as they still remain the dominant approach of managing flood risks in those locations. The findings from the two case studies show that involvement of local stakeholders in decisions related to flood defence schemes is limited and likely to lead to conflict and frustration as well as, potentially, a strengthening of inequalities. These lessons have implications for the United Kingdom and Germany as well as for other locations around the world.
The role of local stakeholder participation in flood defence decisions in the United Kingdom and Germany
An important aspect of integrated flood risk management (FRM) around the world is accepted as being the involvement of a range of stakeholders in flood‐related decision‐making processes. Achieving local stakeholder participation in ways that lead to the expected benefits is burdened by challenges and difficulties. By drawing on examples of practices of local stakeholder participation in FRM in two European countries, the United Kingdom and Germany, this paper aims to understand the extent to which local stakeholders are able to influence FRM. Empirically, the paper focuses on flood defence planning and implementation‐related decisions as they still remain the dominant approach of managing flood risks in those locations. The findings from the two case studies show that involvement of local stakeholders in decisions related to flood defence schemes is limited and likely to lead to conflict and frustration as well as, potentially, a strengthening of inequalities. These lessons have implications for the United Kingdom and Germany as well as for other locations around the world.
The role of local stakeholder participation in flood defence decisions in the United Kingdom and Germany
Begg, C. (author) / Callsen, I. (author) / Kuhlicke, C. (author) / Kelman, I. (author)
Journal of Flood Risk Management ; 11 ; 180-190
2018-06-01
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2018
|British Library Conference Proceedings | 2008
|Stakeholder Participation in Evaluation
British Library Online Contents | 2001
|British Library Online Contents | 2014
|