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  • Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation Partnership Through Collaborative Governance to Build Urban Community Resilience to Flood Risks in Jakarta

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    Dwirahmadi_2016_01Thesis.pdf (3.384Mb)
    Author(s)
    Dwirahmadi, Febi
    Primary Supervisor
    Chu, Cordia
    Other Supervisors
    Rutherford, Shannon
    Baum, Scott
    Year published
    2016
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Climate change related extreme events such as floods have been and will continue to present a great challenge to disaster risk management. With the projected increase in frequency and scale of future climate extremes, there is a pressing need to develop effective strategies to reduce risk and vulnerabilities to floods, particularly in the context of urban settings in developing countries faced with rapid urbanization and a range of social and environmental threats. To deal with climate change and urban flood risks, a large body of research urges urban community resilience building. To this end, literature also highlights the ...
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    Climate change related extreme events such as floods have been and will continue to present a great challenge to disaster risk management. With the projected increase in frequency and scale of future climate extremes, there is a pressing need to develop effective strategies to reduce risk and vulnerabilities to floods, particularly in the context of urban settings in developing countries faced with rapid urbanization and a range of social and environmental threats. To deal with climate change and urban flood risks, a large body of research urges urban community resilience building. To this end, literature also highlights the importance of integrating the efforts of disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA). DRR and CCA represent two different fields with complimentary sets of expertise and policy goals. The former deals with ongoing operational issues of disasters and the latter with making changes to deal with emerging issues associated with climate change. Many authors have argued that collaboration or partnership between DRR and CCA will improve the robustness of strategy particularly to deal with uncertainties into the future. Despite this, in practice, partnership building between the two is difficult and in most cases the two are working in silos.
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    Thesis Type
    Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
    Degree Program
    Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
    School
    Griffith School of Environment
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.25904/1912/3569
    Copyright Statement
    The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
    Item Access Status
    Public
    Subject
    Disaster risk reduction, Jakarta
    Climate change adaptation, Jakarta
    Urban communities, Jakarta
    Resilience. Jakarta
    Flood risk, Jakarta
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/367157
    Collection
    • Theses - Higher Degree by Research

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