Urban development and long-term flood risk and resilience: Experiences over time and across cultures. Cases from Asia, North America, Europe and Australia

Author:

Keenan-Jones Duncan C12ORCID,Serra-Llobet Anna3ORCID,He Hongming4ORCID,Kondolf G Mathias3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Manchester, UK

2. The University of Queensland, Australia

3. University of California Berkeley, USA

4. East China Normal University, China

Abstract

Rivers are the lifeblood of many cities, but flood risk is projected to increase due to urbanisation and climate change. Better floodplain management in and near urban areas is required to produce the New Urban Agenda’s ‘just, safe, healthy, accessible, affordable, resilient and sustainable cities’. Many jurisdictions are looking to move or keep people out of human-constructed residential ‘niches’ on hazardous floodplains, but this has proved difficult to achieve. Our historical case studies of colonial societies in ancient Rome, as well as on the Yangtze, Mississippi and Brisbane rivers, show the deep roots of many contemporary flood risk issues, such as failures of risk perception related to recent settlement, the moral hazard of spending on flood defence infrastructure, the creeping nature of floodplain encroachment into ‘niches’ of perceived protection created by structural interventions, the need for a central, ‘whole of river’ approach, and the difficulties of implementing this approach locally. These case studies also suggest solutions, including the adoption of Indigenous perspectives, benefits to incentivise local actors and a historical education strategy to increase appetite for more sustainable flood risk mitigation.

Funder

Collegium de Lyon— Institut d’Etudes Avancées, Université de Lyon

IMéRA— Institut d’Etudes Avancées, Aix-Marseille Université

EURIAS Fellowship Program and the European Commission

national natural science foundation of china

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

Reference59 articles.

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3. Aurecon Australasia Pty Ltd (2015) Brisbane River Catchment Flood Study: Comprehensive Hydrologic Assessment Draft Final Hydrology Report. Available at: https://www.publications.qld.gov.au/dataset/7761ae95-ea44-4c0d-a3ea-53448c0d89f7/resource/2da11385-8c36-4afa-b609-4b67cf2a1883/download/hydrology-report-draft-final.pdf (accessed 18 February 2022).

4. Past-focused environmental comparisons promote proenvironmental outcomes for conservatives

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