Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Towards Catchment Scale Natural Flood Management : Developing Evidence, Funding and Governance Approaches

Carter, Jeremy Graham ; Karvonen, Andrew LU and Winter, Amanda (2024) In Environmental Policy and Governance p.1-15
Abstract
Natural flood management is emerging as a viable way to leverage ecological services to manage flooding. Stakeholders are progressively positioning natural flood management at the scale of river catchments to encourage a move beyond localised and opportunistic actions towards more strategic and cost-effective flood risk management responses. This reflects a broader turn towards nature-based solutions, acknowledgement of the climate change adaptation imperative, and recognition that natural flood management can achieve multiple socio-economic and biophysical co-benefits. A particular set of issues connected to the specific characteristics of natural flood management are influencing attempts to move towards the catchment scale. This paper... (More)
Natural flood management is emerging as a viable way to leverage ecological services to manage flooding. Stakeholders are progressively positioning natural flood management at the scale of river catchments to encourage a move beyond localised and opportunistic actions towards more strategic and cost-effective flood risk management responses. This reflects a broader turn towards nature-based solutions, acknowledgement of the climate change adaptation imperative, and recognition that natural flood management can achieve multiple socio-economic and biophysical co-benefits. A particular set of issues connected to the specific characteristics of natural flood management are influencing attempts to move towards the catchment scale. This paper identifies evidence, funding and governance as key to understanding the challenges facing natural flood management in this context, with these issues providing a focus for the identification of strategies to move towards catchment scale outcomes. A case study exploring the Irwell catchment in Northwest England provides empirical insights on these themes and identifies approaches that can support the transition towards catchment scale natural flood management. This paper calls for wider implementation of experimental approaches in this field focused on multi-faceted evaluation, blended financing and strategic intermediaries to help overcome overarching evidence, funding and governance challenges to making this transition. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
in
Environmental Policy and Governance
pages
15 pages
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85187416552
ISSN
1756-932X
DOI
10.1002/eet.2101
project
Urban Arena
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b5e893f4-b22f-4384-8c5c-e60e957b39ba
date added to LUP
2024-03-20 08:02:14
date last changed
2024-04-04 01:52:06
@article{b5e893f4-b22f-4384-8c5c-e60e957b39ba,
  abstract     = {{Natural flood management is emerging as a viable way to leverage ecological services to manage flooding. Stakeholders are progressively positioning natural flood management at the scale of river catchments to encourage a move beyond localised and opportunistic actions towards more strategic and cost-effective flood risk management responses. This reflects a broader turn towards nature-based solutions, acknowledgement of the climate change adaptation imperative, and recognition that natural flood management can achieve multiple socio-economic and biophysical co-benefits. A particular set of issues connected to the specific characteristics of natural flood management are influencing attempts to move towards the catchment scale. This paper identifies evidence, funding and governance as key to understanding the challenges facing natural flood management in this context, with these issues providing a focus for the identification of strategies to move towards catchment scale outcomes. A case study exploring the Irwell catchment in Northwest England provides empirical insights on these themes and identifies approaches that can support the transition towards catchment scale natural flood management. This paper calls for wider implementation of experimental approaches in this field focused on multi-faceted evaluation, blended financing and strategic intermediaries to help overcome overarching evidence, funding and governance challenges to making this transition.}},
  author       = {{Carter, Jeremy Graham and Karvonen, Andrew and Winter, Amanda}},
  issn         = {{1756-932X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--15}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Environmental Policy and Governance}},
  title        = {{Towards Catchment Scale Natural Flood Management : Developing Evidence, Funding and Governance Approaches}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eet.2101}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/eet.2101}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}