Drainage has been managed in England and Wales for centuries, but only in the past 20 years has the focus moved away from land drainage and engineered flood defence, to a more holistic catchment management. This shift reflects more general concerns with urban flooding, environmental sustainability, and climate change trends. Flooding events mean that water is increasingly treated as a responsibility as well as an asset, and recent legislation attempts to build a hierarchy within the relevant institutions, to manage surface water and flood risk. This document examines historical influences in the light of recent statutory changes, and analyses current ...
Nature-based solutions (NBS) to flood risk management include natural flood management (NFM) and sus...
The discourse of "flood defence", deeply rooted in English historical traditions, has been contested...
The long historical background to flood defence is outlined. It is noted that many of the concerns a...
Partly in response to the UK flooding events of 2007, a number of reports have recently been produce...
With more than 80% of the global population living on land that is prone to flooding, the devastatio...
Flood risk management (FRM) in England is undergoing a major paradigm shift as it moves from an ideo...
Surface water flooding is an issue which has required an increased level of addressment over the pas...
The UK 2007 floods resulted in damages estimated to exceed over £4 billion. This triggered a nationa...
Contemporary water management practices worldwide are informed by two leading paradigms: integrated ...
Alternative governance approaches in which non-state actors play a substantial role in policy making...
We propose a suite of actions for strengthening water governance in contexts with complex, multi-tie...
During the exceptional rainfall events of summer 2007, floods inundated 7,300 businesses and 48,000 ...
Climate change has seen increased pressures put on the existing ageing flood mitigation infrastructu...
This paper examines the rescaling of flood risk management (FRM) in Britain over the past 70+ years....
Both nonstatutory community-based catchment management groups and existing statutory groups seek eff...
Nature-based solutions (NBS) to flood risk management include natural flood management (NFM) and sus...
The discourse of "flood defence", deeply rooted in English historical traditions, has been contested...
The long historical background to flood defence is outlined. It is noted that many of the concerns a...
Partly in response to the UK flooding events of 2007, a number of reports have recently been produce...
With more than 80% of the global population living on land that is prone to flooding, the devastatio...
Flood risk management (FRM) in England is undergoing a major paradigm shift as it moves from an ideo...
Surface water flooding is an issue which has required an increased level of addressment over the pas...
The UK 2007 floods resulted in damages estimated to exceed over £4 billion. This triggered a nationa...
Contemporary water management practices worldwide are informed by two leading paradigms: integrated ...
Alternative governance approaches in which non-state actors play a substantial role in policy making...
We propose a suite of actions for strengthening water governance in contexts with complex, multi-tie...
During the exceptional rainfall events of summer 2007, floods inundated 7,300 businesses and 48,000 ...
Climate change has seen increased pressures put on the existing ageing flood mitigation infrastructu...
This paper examines the rescaling of flood risk management (FRM) in Britain over the past 70+ years....
Both nonstatutory community-based catchment management groups and existing statutory groups seek eff...
Nature-based solutions (NBS) to flood risk management include natural flood management (NFM) and sus...
The discourse of "flood defence", deeply rooted in English historical traditions, has been contested...
The long historical background to flood defence is outlined. It is noted that many of the concerns a...