Floods are among the most common and devasting natural
disasters. In the wake of such an event, the pressure to initiate
flood protection schemes that will provide security is enormous,
and politicians promise quick solutions in the national interest.
Jeroen Warner examines a number of such projects from around the
world, including the Middle East, South Asia and Western Europe,
aimed at the prevention of serious flooding. Each provoked a level
of controversy unforeseen by its initiators, with the result that
schemes were shelved, were not completed, or simply failed. The
author shows how such projects inevitably become politicised as
different stakeholders seek to promote their interests. This book
is the first detailed account of the politics and decision-making
surrounding flood planning and of the lessons to be learned.
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