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Clumsy Floodplains: Responsive Land Policy for Extreme Floods [Kõva köide]

(Utrecht University, Netherlands)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 170 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 498 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jan-2011
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1409418456
  • ISBN-13: 9781409418450
  • Formaat: Hardback, 170 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 498 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jan-2011
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1409418456
  • ISBN-13: 9781409418450
Extreme floods cause enormous damage in floodplains, which levees cannot prevent. Therefore, it is vital for spatial planning to provide space for water retention in these areas. Land use planners, water management agencies, landowners, and policymakers all agree on this challenge, but attempts to make the space for rivers to provide retention are generally not very successful. Adopting an innovative interdisciplinary approach, this book examines how society can manage the use of the floodplains along rivers in the face of extreme floods, focusing in particular on the relation between social arrangements and the elemental forces of floods. The book firstly analyses why contemporary floodplain management is so often clumsy and ineffective by looking at various real-life situations in Germany, using Cultural Theory to provide a much-needed, but previously neglected social perspective. These analyses show a pattern of activity resulting from different rationalities which dominate the floodplains in different phases. During extreme floods, it is rational to manage floodplains as dangerous areas; sandbags and disaster management dominate the scene. After some time, the rationality of control takes over the floodplain management; policymakers discuss flood risk and water managers build levees. When public attention diminishes, floodplains become inconspicuous until more and more stakeholders regard floodplains as profitable land. The current system of planning, law, and property rights even encourages stakeholders to act out their plural rationalities. A permanent dynamic imbalance of different rationalities leads to a robust social construction of the floodplains which results in viable but clumsy floodplains. In the course of time, however, the patterns of activity in the floodplains lead to an increase in intensity and frequency of extreme floods, and to more vulnerable potential damages in the floodplains. Risk increases. Coping with this situation needs another kind of floodplain management. This book proposes an innovative concept - Large Areas for Temporary Emergency Retention (LATER) - in "Clumsy Floodplains" as an alternative to levee-based flood protection. The concept aims at reducing damage by extreme floods in a catchment area by inundating less valuable areas to protect places that are more valuable. It finally examines how this LATER concept might be implemented in areas where there is currently a clumsy style of floodplain management, what interventions are required and how these might come about effectively. Again, using Cultural Theory, the book puts forward a valuable land policy solution which aims at implementing LATER in clumsy floodplains and which develops an obligatory insurance against natural hazards as a responsive land policy for LATER. The book represents the author's PhD research, which he conducted as research assistant at the department for Land Policy, Land Management and Municipal Geoinformation at the School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University, Germany.
List of Figures vii
About the Author ix
Preface: A Passion for Floods xi
Structure of the Book xiii
List of Abbreviations xv
1 Clumsy Floodplains 1(46)
The Social Construction of Floodplains
1(16)
Patterns of Human Activity
3(3)
Perceiving Floodplains
6(5)
Inconspicuous Floodplains
11(2)
Persistent Clumsiness
13(4)
Planning, Law and Property Rights for the Social Construction
17(20)
Landowners
17(4)
Water Management Agencies
21(5)
Policymakers
26(5)
Land Use Planners
31(4)
Legitimated Patterns of Action
35(2)
Rationalities of the Social Construction
37(10)
The Theory of Polyrationality
37(5)
Rational Floodplains
42(3)
The Polyrational Social Construction
45(2)
2 Coping with Extreme Floods 47(48)
Paradigms for Coping with Extreme Floods
47(14)
Extreme Floods
47(5)
Flood Protection
52(1)
Retention in the Catchment and Extreme Floods
53(4)
Flood Risk Management
57(3)
Towards Floodplain Management
60(1)
Large Areas for Temporary Emergency Retention
61(8)
LATER
61(5)
Property-focused Risk Alliances
66(2)
Floodplain Management by LATER
68(1)
Economics of LATER
69(26)
Efficiency of LATER
70(6)
Gains and Losses from LATER
76(3)
The Flooding Game
79(9)
Technological Lock-in
88(7)
3 Responsive Land Policy for LATER 95(44)
Polyrational Land Policies for LATER
95(25)
Competitive: Privatised Flood Protection
97(5)
Cooperative: LATER Land Trusts
102(5)
Constitutional: Mandatory Protection Readjustment
107(1)
German Mandatory Land Readjustment
108(6)
Composed: Business as Usual LATER
114(1)
Comparison
114(6)
Contesting Land Policies
120(10)
Polyrational Land Policies in a Polyrational World
120(3)
Responding Polyrational
123(7)
A Clumsy Response for LATER
130(9)
Insurances as Land Policy
130(1)
Insurances Against Flooding
131(4)
Clumsiness of the Obligatory Insurance
135(1)
Everlasting Clumsiness
136(3)
Bibliography 139(12)
Index 151
Thomas Hartmann, Department Human Geography and Urban and Regional Planning, Faculty for Geosciences, Utrecht University, The Netherlands