This book provides an important overview of how climate-driven natural hazards like river or pluvial floods, droughts, heat waves or forest fires, continue to play a central role across the globe in the 21st century. Urban resilience has become an important term in response to climate change. Resilience describes the ability of a system to absorb shocks and depends on the vulnerability and recovery time of a system. A shock affects a system to the extent that it becomes vulnerable to the event. This book focus examines how private property-owners might implement such measures or improve their individual coping and adaptive capacity to respond to future events. The book looks at the existence of various planning, legal, financial incentives and psychological factors designed to encourage individuals to take an active role in natural hazard risk management and through the presentation of theoretical discussions and empirical cases shows how urban resilience can be achieved. In addition, the book guides the reader through different conceptual frameworks by showing how urban regions are trying to reach urban resilience on privately-owned land. Each chapter focuses on different cultural, socio-economic and political backgrounds to demonstrate how different institutional frameworks have an impact.
Introduction.- Resilient cities and homeowners action: governing for
flood resilience through homeowner contributions.- Propety, property rights
and natural hazards and beyond.- Individual behaviour in disaster risk
reduction.- Resilient flood recovery financial schemes for the
recovery-mitigation nexus.- Residents role in Sponge City construction and
urban flood disaster relief of China.- Factors influencing flood related
coping appraisal among homeowners and residents in Kampala,
Uganda.- Addressing the homeowners barriers to Property-Level Flood Risk
Adaption: A case study of tailored expert advice in Belgium.- Strategic risk
communication to increase the climate resilience of households Conceptual
insights and a strategy example from Germany.- Government, homeowners, and
wildfire: what can we learn from Californias resilience planning
experience?.- Supporting stakeholder-based adaptation to climate change:
experiences in theCity of Melbourne.- Conclusion.
Thomas Thaler is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Mountain Risk Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria.
Thomas Hartmann is the chair of land policy and land management at the School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University, Dortmund, Germany.
Lenka Slavķkovį is Associate Professor in public economics at J.E.P.University in Śstķ nad Labem, Czech Republic.
Barbara Tempels is Assistant Professor at the Department of Environmental Sciences at Wageningen University, Wageningen, the Netherlands.