Recent literature in sociohydrology has shown the important role of flood memory in shaping hydrological risk. In this paper, we present a system dynamics model of human-flood interactions that simulates how the river proximity of human settlements is altered by changes in flood memory. We also compare our model outcomes with an unprecedented dataset consisting of historical and archeological observations of human settlements in the Czech Republic that have been affected by major flood events. This comparison allows us to evaluate the potentials and limitations of our sociohydrological model in capturing essential features of flood risk changes, including the process of resettling farther and closer to the river. Our results show that the a...
Two-way interactions and feedback between hydrological and social processes in settled floodplains d...
Socio-hydrological flood risk models describe the temporal co-evolution of coupled human–flood syste...
Flooding is globally one of the most damaging natural hazard. Flood risk will most likely increase i...
Recent literature in sociohydrology has shown the important role of flood memory in shaping hydrolog...
Over history, humankind has tended to settle near streams because of the role of rivers as transport...
The risk coping culture of a community plays a major role in the development of urban floodplains. I...
What implications do societies’ risk perceptions have for flood losses? This study uses a stylized, ...
Over the last few years, several socio-hydrological studies have investigated the risk dynamics gene...
This paper offers a conceptual approach to explore the complex dynamics of floodplains as fully coup...
Flooding risk results from complex interactions between hydrological hazards (e.g., riverine inundat...
To understand the spatiotemporal changes of flood risk, we need to determine the way in which humans...
Floods are one of the most costly natural hazards worldwide, affecting millions of people every year...
The negative impacts of floods are attributed to the extent and magnitude of a flood hazard, and the...
Scholars have unravelled the complexities and underlying uncertainties in coupled human and water sy...
Two-way interactions and feedback between hydrological and social processes in settled floodplains d...
Socio-hydrological flood risk models describe the temporal co-evolution of coupled human–flood syste...
Flooding is globally one of the most damaging natural hazard. Flood risk will most likely increase i...
Recent literature in sociohydrology has shown the important role of flood memory in shaping hydrolog...
Over history, humankind has tended to settle near streams because of the role of rivers as transport...
The risk coping culture of a community plays a major role in the development of urban floodplains. I...
What implications do societies’ risk perceptions have for flood losses? This study uses a stylized, ...
Over the last few years, several socio-hydrological studies have investigated the risk dynamics gene...
This paper offers a conceptual approach to explore the complex dynamics of floodplains as fully coup...
Flooding risk results from complex interactions between hydrological hazards (e.g., riverine inundat...
To understand the spatiotemporal changes of flood risk, we need to determine the way in which humans...
Floods are one of the most costly natural hazards worldwide, affecting millions of people every year...
The negative impacts of floods are attributed to the extent and magnitude of a flood hazard, and the...
Scholars have unravelled the complexities and underlying uncertainties in coupled human and water sy...
Two-way interactions and feedback between hydrological and social processes in settled floodplains d...
Socio-hydrological flood risk models describe the temporal co-evolution of coupled human–flood syste...
Flooding is globally one of the most damaging natural hazard. Flood risk will most likely increase i...