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Brief communication: Inclusiveness in designing an early warning system for flood resilience

Tahmina Yasmin, Kieran Khamis, A. Ross, Subir Sen, Anita Sharma, Debashish Sen, Sumit Sen, Wouter Buytaert, David M. Hannah

2023Natural hazards and earth system sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Floods remain a wicked problem and are becoming more destructive with widespread ecological, social, and economic impacts. The problem is acute in mountainous river catchments where plausible assumptions of risk behaviour to flood exposure and vulnerability are crucial. Inclusive approaches are required to design suitable flood early warning systems (EWSs) with a focus on local social and governance context rather than technology, as is the case with existing practice. We assess potential approaches for facilitating inclusiveness in designing EWSs by integrating diverse contexts and identifying preconditions and missing links. We advocate the use of a SMART approach as a checklist for good practice to facilitate bottom-up initiatives that benefit the community at risk by engaging them at every stage of the decision-making process.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythWarning systemResilience (materials science)Context (archaeology)Vulnerability (computing)Environmental planningCorporate governanceEnvironmental resource managementProcess (computing)Risk governanceRisk analysis (engineering)Computer scienceEarly warning systemProcess managementBusinessComputer securityGeographyEnvironmental scienceTelecommunicationsThermodynamicsArchaeologyPhysicsOperating systemFinanceFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementDisaster Management and ResilienceTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research