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A game of give and take: the introduction of multi-layer (water) safety in the Netherlands and Flanders
Kaufmann, M.; Mees, H.; Liefferink, D.; Crabbé, A. (2016). A game of give and take: the introduction of multi-layer (water) safety in the Netherlands and Flanders. Land Use Policy 57: 277-286. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2016.05.033
In: Land Use Policy. Elsevier: London. ISSN 0264-8377; e-ISSN 1873-5754, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Author keywords
    Flood risk management; Multi-layered (water) safety; Policy analysis; Discourse structuration; Discourse institutionalisation

Authors  Top 
  • Kaufmann, M.
  • Mees, H., more
  • Liefferink, D.
  • Crabbé, A., more

Abstract
    At the beginning of the 21st century, the Netherlands and Flanders introduced a risk-based approach to flood risk management (FRM), labelled as multi-layer (water) safety. In contrast to a flood defence approach, risk-based management stresses the need to manage both the consequences and probability of a flood. The concept has developed differently in the two countries, as we conclude from a discursive-institutionalist research perspective. The Netherlands is characterised by a high institutionalization of the traditional flood defence discourse and a more closed policy arrangement, whereas in Flanders, the flood defence discourse is less institutionalized and the arrangement is more open. In both countries we see an opening of the arrangement preceding the establishment of multi-layer (water) safety, but at the same time, actors stress different aspects of the concept in order to increase its compatibility with the existing policy arrangement. In the Netherlands, the focus is on probability management, in Flanders on consequence management. In the Netherlands, multi-layer (water) safety as a concept could be established because it stabilises the system in the short-term by reinforcing the importance of flood defence, whereas in Flanders, policymakers were receptive to the concept because it supports a shift of responsibility towards actors outside traditional water management.

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