地方政府对灾害风险的认识对土地抗灾规划实施的影响

Land Pub Date : 2024-07-19 DOI:10.3390/land13071085
Soyoung Kim, Simon A. Andrew, Edgar Ramirez de la Cruz, Woo-Je Kim, R. Feiock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

地方政府管理者在可持续发展和气候适应规划以及土地利用政策方面发挥着至关重要的作用,但人们对管理者对灾害风险的关注如何影响抗灾政策的实施,以及这种关系在不同地貌和灾害类型下的差异知之甚少。将管理者对灾害的关注与其规划选择联系起来,对于适应气候变化的抗灾规划尤为重要,因为温室气体排放是全球性的,而气候变化造成的危害却是地方性的。此外,气候适应规划还包括来自多种灾害的风险。我们以美国佛罗里达州的一个城市为样本,报告了地方政府管理者对特定灾害的气候相关关注与他们对四种灾害的适应性规划优先级之间关系的实证分析结果,这四种灾害是:河流洪水、海平面上升、风暴潮和飓风/龙卷风。利用对地方灾害管理者的调查数据和关于适应规划行动实施情况的政策数据,确定了管理者关注的问题与规划实施之间的联系,并对不同社区和不同类型的灾害进行了比较。集合对数回归结果显示,即使在控制了客观风险和相关社区特征之后,在这些灾害中观察到的差异依然存在。我们讨论了四种灾害之间差异的性质,并探讨了研究结果对土地利用和气候适应文献以及地方政府管理人员教育的影响。
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Impacts of Local Government Perceptions of Disaster Risks on Land Resilience Planning Implementation
Local government managers play a critical role in sustainability and climate adaptation planning, and in relation to land-use policy, but little is known about how managers’ hazard risk concerns influence the implementation of resilience policy or how this relationship may vary across different landscapes and types of hazards. Linking managers’ disaster concerns to their planning choices is particularly relevant to resilience planning for adaptation to climate change, since greenhouse gas emissions are global but the harms produced by climate change are local. Moreover, climate adaptation planning encompasses risks from multiple hazards. For a sample of cities in the state of Florida, USA, we report the findings of empirical analysis of the relationships between local government managers’ hazard-specific climate-related disaster concerns and their resilience-planning priorities for four types of hazards: river flooding, sea-level rise, storm surge and hurricane/tornado winds. Drawing on data from a survey of local disaster managers and policy data on the implementation of adaptation-planning actions, the link between managers’ concerns and plan implementation is identified and compared across communities and across types of hazards. The pooled logit regression results reveal that the differences observed among these hazards persist even after controlling for objective risks and relevant community characteristics. We discuss the nature of the differences across four hazards and explore the implications of the findings for the literature on land use and climate adaptation and for the education of local government managers.
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