Vol. 8, No. 2 April-June 2002
|
Improving the Effectiveness of Flood Preparedness Floods often reveal alarming gaps in the preparations for such events. Yet much is now known about how governments, communities and individuals can anticipate floods and prepare themselves effectively. Lessons learned, and good practices identified, must be well disseminated and assimilated. Effective flood preparedness typically requires the integration of inputs and actions by technical and lay communities who sometimes find it difficult to communicate. Sound flood preparedness requires a flexible and creative mix of “top-down” and “bottom-up” approaches. It also requires effective coordination of complex multi-organization emergency response systems. Being well-prepared for floods includes these practices:
Effectiveness of flood preparedness plans is often undermined by insufficient flood detection and forecasting capability. Where reliable systems exist, preoccupation with technocractic components (i.e., detection, monitoring and forecasting) generally performed by scientific organizations (such as a meteorological service) sometimes leads to neglect of warning dissemination to the public. There may be little appreciation of the social, community and individual processes at work among recipients to whom it is assumed warnings are conveyed. Sometimes it is maintained that a “flood warning” has been disseminated, when in practice all that has happened is that a “flood forecast” has been passed to government departments. Experience indicates that flood forecasting and warning systems are most robust and effective when they integrate local people and information (from the bottom up) with “official” warning systems. These are much stronger when they are designed to take advantage of in-coming information from local communities, and strong social community networks which can effectively amplify warnings. |
Newsletter | Disaster Links | ADPC Home |
Information, Research & Network Support
Asian Disaster Preparedness Center
P.O.Box 4, Klong Luang, Pathumthani 12120, Thailand.
Tel: (66-2) 524-5378; Fax: (66-2) 524-5360; Email:ambika@ait.ac.th