2015
DOI: 10.1002/2014wr016416
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Debates—Perspectives on socio‐hydrology: Capturing feedbacks between physical and social processes

Abstract: In flood risk assessment, there remains a lack of analytical frameworks capturing the dynamics emerging from two-way feedbacks between physical and social processes, such as adaptation and levee effect. The former, ''adaptation effect'', relates to the observation that the occurrence of more frequent flooding is often associated with decreasing vulnerability. The latter, ''levee effect'', relates to the observation that the non-occurrence of frequent flooding (possibly caused by flood protection structures, e.… Show more

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Cited by 392 publications
(389 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…Kandasamy et al (2014) first characterized the concept of the pendulum swing by tracing the 100-year history of the competition for water between agricultural development and environmental health in the Murrumbidgee River basin. Similar dynamics were also found in the humanwater system in the arid Tarim River basin (Liu et al, 2014) and in human-flood interactions (Baldassarre et al, 2015). A pendulum swing can be divided into four typical stages: (1) the initial exploitation stage, which is focused exclusively on economic development; (2) the onset environmental degradation stage, which is accompanied by the introduction of remedial infrastructure; (3) the widespread environmental degradation stage, which leads to the necessity of mitigation measures; and (4) the recovery stage, at which ultimate solutions are implemented.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 73%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Kandasamy et al (2014) first characterized the concept of the pendulum swing by tracing the 100-year history of the competition for water between agricultural development and environmental health in the Murrumbidgee River basin. Similar dynamics were also found in the humanwater system in the arid Tarim River basin (Liu et al, 2014) and in human-flood interactions (Baldassarre et al, 2015). A pendulum swing can be divided into four typical stages: (1) the initial exploitation stage, which is focused exclusively on economic development; (2) the onset environmental degradation stage, which is accompanied by the introduction of remedial infrastructure; (3) the widespread environmental degradation stage, which leads to the necessity of mitigation measures; and (4) the recovery stage, at which ultimate solutions are implemented.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…(a) Relationship between annual groundwater withdrawal and the population and GDP; (b) co-evolution of the total groundwater withdrawal against the annual grain production before and after 2002. 1998); that is, the societies can be seen as green (the other type is technological) (Baldassarre et al, 2015).…”
Section: Era 5 (2003-present): Returning To Equilibriummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These models allow for asking questions about the coupled system's behavior that cannot be asked of historical data, given that a region's history followed one fixed trajectory. For example, Di Baldassarre et al (2015) explored the effect of choosing infrastructure or adapting to floods on flood damages. As Loucks (2015) points out, "human behavior can be surprising, and we would like to be forewarned about and prepare for such possible surprises.…”
Section: Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the literature, numerous studies have investigated various social or ecological aspects of coastal Bangladesh in a different light. For example, several studies investigated some aspects of livelihood issues, such as collective management of shared water resources (Afroz et al 2016), flood protection and rural-urban migration (Choudhury et al 2004, Di Baldassarre et al 2015, climate change impacts on agriculture (Huq et al 2015, Lázár et al 2015, and the rise of more intensive forms of aquaculture (Swapan and Gavin 2011). These studies tend to center on household-level vulnerabilities and responses to cope with emerging challenges.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%