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Building resilience to natural hazards in the context of climate change : knowledge integration, implementation and learning / / Gerard Hutter, Marco Neubert, Regine Ortlepp, editors



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Titolo: Building resilience to natural hazards in the context of climate change : knowledge integration, implementation and learning / / Gerard Hutter, Marco Neubert, Regine Ortlepp, editors Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Wiesbaden, Germany : , : Springer, , [2021]
©2021
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (260 pages)
Disciplina: 333.9516
Soggetto topico: Resilience (Ecology)
Resiliència (Tret de la personalitat)
Catàstrofes naturals
Canvi climàtic
Urbanisme
Política urbana
Soggetto genere / forma: Llibres electrònics
Persona (resp. second.): HutterGerard
NeubertMarco
OrtleppRegine
Nota di contenuto: Intro -- Foreword -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- Abbreviations -- 1 Building Resilience to Natural Hazards in the Context of Climate Change-Introducing the Focus and Agenda of the Edited Volume -- 1.1 Purpose and Focus of the Volume -- 1.2 Introducing the Agenda -- 1.2.1 Building Resilience as a Core Element of Urban Resilience -- 1.2.2 Knowledge Integration -- 1.2.3 Implementation at Local Level -- 1.2.4 Learning in the Context of Participation and Multi-level Governance -- 1.3 Overview Over the Contributions to the Volume -- 2 Knowledge Integration for Building Resilience-the Example of Flood Risk Maps -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Three Approaches to Knowledge Integration -- 2.3 An illustrative example: Developing Flood risk Maps -- 2.3.1 Knowledge Sharing -- 2.3.2 Purposeful Combination of Specialized and Complementary Knowledge -- 2.3.3 Using similar/related Knowledge -- 2.4 Justifying knowledge Integration as Means to Build Resilience -- 2.4.1 Means and their Justification through Ends -- 2.4.2 Building Resilience as Pro- and Reactive Management of Disturbance and Surprise -- 2.4.3 Building Specified and General Resilience -- 2.5 Knowledge Integration and Urban Resilience -- 2.6 Conclusion and Outlook -- 3 Justice and Resilience in Flood Risk Management: What Are the Socio-Political Implications? -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Social Justice-Environmental Justice-Climate Justice: Different, but the Same -- 3.2.1 Social Justice and Resilience -- 3.2.2 Environmental Justice and Resilience -- 3.2.3 Climate Justice and Resilience -- 3.3 Conclusion -- 4 House Lifting to Improve Flood Resilience in Settlement Areas-an Example of the Elbe Village Brockwitz (Saxony, Germany) -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 From Flood Risk Management to Resilience and Sustainability.
4.1.2 Background and the Idea of House Lifting in Brockwitz -- 4.2 Methodology -- 4.2.1 Overall Approach for Analyzing Flood Resilience and Sustainability -- 4.2.2 Analysis of Risk and Risk Mitigation -- 4.2.3 Analysis of Nature and Environmental Issues -- 4.3 Results and Discussion -- 4.3.1 Action Alternatives Investigated for the Case Study Brockwitz -- 4.3.2 Results of Environmental and Nature Conservation Aspects -- 4.3.3 Economic Aspects -- 4.3.4 First Overall Assessment of House Lifting in Brockwitz -- 4.4 Conclusions -- 5 Sustainability and Resilience-A Practical Approach to Assessing Sustainability in Innovative Infrastructure Projects -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Sustainability Check for Innovative Infrastructure Projects -- 5.2.1 Integrating Sustainability and Resilience -- 5.2.2 Sustainability Check-A Practical Screening Approach for Infrastructure Projects -- 5.3 Resilience Understanding for Infrastructure Innovation -- 5.3.1 Why Resilience? -- 5.3.2 Resilience of What to What? -- 5.3.3 Which Resilience? -- 5.3.4 Resilience Where, for Whom and When? -- 5.3.5 Resilience-How? -- 5.4 Applying the Sustainability Check -- 5.4.1 How to Apply the Sustainability Check? -- 5.4.2 Application with Hypothetic and Real Cases -- 5.4.3 Sustainability Trends for Innovative Infrastructure Solutions -- 5.4.4 How Do Real World Projects Profit from the Sustainability Check -- 5.5 Concluding Discussion of Results and the Assessment Approach -- 6 Building Heat-Resilient Neighborhoods-Testing the Implementation on Buildings and in Open Spaces in Two Sample Quarters Dresden and Erfurt -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Multi-level Understanding of Resilience -- 6.2.1 Meanings of Resilience -- 6.2.2 Resilience of Individual Persons -- 6.2.3 Resilience of Buildings -- 6.2.4 Resilience of Open Spaces -- 6.2.5 Multi-level Understanding of Neighborhood's Resilience.
6.3 Structural and Technical Adaptation Solutions for Heat-resilient Buildings -- 6.3.1 Adaptation Concepts for Buildings and the Criteria of Citizens Involvement and Acceptance -- 6.3.2 Implementation of Measures in Existing Large Panel Construction Buildings -- 6.3.3 Planned implementation for Measures in Existing "Wilhelminian-style" Buildings -- 6.3.4 Implementation of Green Roofs on New Buildings -- 6.3.5 Enabling and Inhibiting Factors in Planning and Implementation -- 6.4 Ecosystem-Based Adaptation Solutions of Green Spaces for Heat-Resilient Neighborhoods -- 6.4.1 Identification of Adaptation Requirements in Open Spaces -- 6.4.2 Implementation of Measures in Green Spaces -- 6.4.3 Planned Implementation of Heat Resilient Tram and Bus Stops -- 6.4.4 Implementation of City Tree Planting -- 6.4.5 Implementation of Civic Watering Initiative for City Trees -- 6.4.6 Restricting and Inhibiting Factors of Planning and Implementing Climate Adaptation Measures -- 6.5 Conclusions -- 7 The Impulse Project Stuttgart-Stimulating Resilient Urban Development Through Blue-Green Infrastructure -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Conceptual Framework -- 7.2.1 Conceptualizing and Designing Blue-green Infrastructure -- 7.2.2 Resilience of Buildings and Building Resilience -- 7.3 Project Description -- 7.3.1 Location, Concept and Design Process -- 7.3.2 Configuration and Functionality -- 7.3.3 Water Flow, Storage and Irrigation -- 7.3.4 Greywater Treatment -- 7.3.5 Urban Greening -- 7.3.6 Control and Monitoring System -- 7.4 Discussion and Transfer -- 7.4.1 The Impulse Project-a Showcase for Building Resilience? -- 7.4.2 The Impulse Project-an Impulse for Building Resilience? -- 8 Participation for Building Urban Climate Resilience? Results from Four Cities in Germany -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.1.1 Expected Effects of Participation.
8.1.2 Lack of Empirical Evaluations of Participatory Approaches -- 8.1.3 Main Research Question and Chapter Overview -- 8.2 Resilience Concept for the Evaluation of Participation Effects -- 8.2.1 Resilience Knowledge, Action and Network -- 8.2.2 Focus on Actors and Dimensions Changeable by Participation -- 8.3 Evaluation of Participatory Processes on Adaptation to Climate Change in Four Cities in Germany -- 8.3.1 Methods: Questionnaires and Indicators of Resilience Increases -- 8.3.2 Results: Changes in Resilience Knowledge, Action and Network -- 8.4 Discussion -- 8.5 Conclusions -- 9 Building Resilience in the Context of Multi-Level Governance-Insights from a Living Lab in the Ruhr -- 9.1 Resilience and Its Critics -- 9.2 Adaptive Governance and Resilience -- 9.3 Institutional Environment: City Regions and Multi-level Governance -- 9.4 City-regional Governance in the Ruhr-Prepared for Resilience? -- 9.5 Bringing Resilience In? -- 9.6 Conclusion -- 10 Project-Based Learning for Building Urban Resilience-Reflecting on Project Examples of Climate Change Adaptation in the Dresden Region -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Towards a Typology of Project-Based Learning Opportunities for Building Urban Resilience -- 10.2.1 Urban Resilience and Learning from Projects -- 10.2.2 Learning from Projects to Increase Adaptive and Transformative Capacity -- 10.2.3 Outline of a Typology of Project-Based Learning Opportunities -- 10.3 Projects on Climate Change Adaptation-Examples in the Dresden region -- 10.3.1 Methodological Note -- 10.3.2 The Project REGKLAM: Do Large Projects Always have Strong Effects? -- 10.3.3 The Project HeatResilientCity (HRC): A Case of Inter-Project Learning? -- 10.4 Conclusion and Outlook.
Titolo autorizzato: Building Resilience to Natural Hazards in the Context of Climate Change  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 3-658-33702-8
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910495240903321
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Serie: Studien Zur Resilienzforschung