The paper argues for an integrated approach to the management of water-related disasters that becomes a full part of the political decision-making process at the earliest possible moment and focuses on preparedness, mitigating their negative impacts and also considering their positive impacts, particularly those of floods. By doing this, there is an opportunity to consider the three pillars of sustainable development, and understand the options that exist and the trade-offs that may need to be made between economic efficiency, environmental sustainability and social equity. Within the post-2015 agenda, water-related disasters are addressed by targets under a number of different Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). As climate change becomes an ever-more-present reality, whose impacts are often experienced through water-related disasters such as floods and droughts, there is an urgent need to build disaster-resilient societies through more integrated policies and practices, including stakeholders' perspectives and a partnership approach. The paper provides stakeholder perspectives and approaches from around the world that are putting these ideas into practice.
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Research Article|
February 12 2015
Integrated policies and practices for flood and drought risk management Available to Purchase
A. Grobicki;
A. Grobicki
*
aGlobal Water Partnership Organisation (GWPO), Linnégatan 87D; PO Box 24177, 104 51 Stockholm, Sweden
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]
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F. MacLeod;
F. MacLeod
aGlobal Water Partnership Organisation (GWPO), Linnégatan 87D; PO Box 24177, 104 51 Stockholm, Sweden
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F. Pischke
F. Pischke
bGlobal Water Partnership Organisation (GWPO), 7 bis, avenue de la Paix, Case postale 2300, CH-1211 Genève 2, Switzerland
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Water Policy (2015) 17 (S1): 180–194.
Citation
A. Grobicki, F. MacLeod, F. Pischke; Integrated policies and practices for flood and drought risk management. Water Policy 1 March 2015; 17 (S1): 180–194. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2015.009
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