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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 License. It is free to read, download and share at
Elgaronline. Centralizing the role of land and landowners, Spatial
Flood Risk Management brings together knowledge from socio-economy,
public policy, hydrology, geomorphology, and engineering to
establish an interdisciplinary knowledge base on spatial approaches
to managing flood risks. Discussing key barriers and sharing
evidence-based best practices to flood risk management,
international contributors involved in the LAND4FLOOD EU COST
Action initiative (CA16209) seek transferrable solutions to the
implementation challenges of nature-based solutions. Introducing
the concept of spatial flood risk management, the multi-national
teams of authors consider the notion of land through three
analytical lenses: as a biophysical system, a socio-economic
resource, and a solution to flood-risk management. Advocating for a
more comprehensive approach, the book explores options of where and
how to store water within catchments, including decentralized water
retention in the hinterland, flood storage along rivers, and
planned flooding in resilient cities. Bringing together the
existing knowledge on the relation between flood risk management
and land with an international and interdisciplinary scope, this
book will prove invaluable to academics, policy makers and public
authorities involved in flood risk management, urban planners, and
governing environmental bodies.
Property Rights and Climate Change explores the multifarious
relationships between different types of climate-driven
environmental changes and property rights. This original
contribution to the literature examines such climate changes
through the lens of property rights, rather than through the lens
of land use planning. The inherent assumption pursued is that the
different types of environmental changes, with their particular
effects and impact on land use, share common issues regarding the
relation between the social construction of land via property
rights and the dynamics of a changing environment. Making these
common issues explicit and discussing the different approaches to
them is the central objective of this book. Through examining a
variety of cases from the Arctic to the Australian coast, the
contributors take a transdisciplinary look at the winners and
losers of climate change, discuss approaches to dealing with
changing environmental conditions, and stimulate pathways for
further research. This book is essential reading for lawyers,
planners, property rights experts and environmentalists.
This book provides an introduction to spatial planning in the
Netherlands. It explores the academic underpinnings of the
discipline and its practical implications, making use of insights
on planning practices from the Netherlands. As an academic book
with relevance for spatial planning teaching and practice, the
relation between planning practice and planning as an academic
discipline are discussed. A key analytical concept is introduced to
discuss the different dimensions of planning: the planning
triangle. This framework helps to bridge the strategic and
conceptual elements of planning with its realization. The object,
process, and context of planning and its relations are discussed.
The core of the academic discipline and profession of spatial
planning entails looking (far) into the future, stimulating
discussion, formulating a desired future direction through an
informal and collective planning process, and then formalizing and
placing current action into that future perspective. In that sense,
spatial planning can be understood as the strategic organization of
hopes and expectations. As a study book it is suitable for students
of planning at various universities, but also for students in
higher professional education. For those involved in the
professional field of spatial planning, this book offers a sound
foundation.
This open access book addresses the various disciplinary aspects of
nature-based solutions in flood risk management on private land. In
recent decades, water management has been moving towards
nature-based solutions. These are assumed to be much more
multi-purpose than traditional "grey infrastructures" and seem to
be regarded as a panacea for many environmental issues. At the same
time, such measures require more - and mostly privately owned -
land and more diverse stakeholder involvement than traditional
(grey) engineering approaches. They also present challenges related
to different disciplines. Nature-based solutions for flood risk
management not only require technical expertise, but also call for
interdisciplinary insights from land-use planning, economics,
property rights, sociology, landscape planning, ecology, hydrology,
agriculture and other disciplines to address the challenges of
implementing them. Ultimately, nature-based flood risk management
is a multi-disciplinary endeavor. Featuring numerous case studies
of nature-based flood risk management accompanied by commentaries,
this book presents brief academic reflections from two different
disciplinary perspectives that critically highlight which specific
aspects are of significance, and as such, underscore the
multi-disciplinary nature of the challenges faced.
Flood Resilience of Private Properties examines the division and
balance of responsibilities between the public and the private when
discussing flood resilience of private properties. Flooding is an
expensive climate-related disaster and a threat to urban life.
Continuing development in flood-prone zones compound the risks.
Protecting all properties to the same standards is ever more
challenging. Research has focused on improved planning and adapting
publicly-owned infrastructure such as streets, evacuation routes,
and retention ponds. However, damages often happen on private land.
To realize a flood-resilient city, owners of privately-owned
residential houses also need to act. Measures such as mobile
barriers and backwater valves or avoiding vulnerable uses in
basements can make homes more flood-resilient. But private owners
may be unaware of flooding risks or may lack the means and
knowledge to act. Incentives may be insufficient, while fragmented
or unclear property rights and responsibilities entrench inertia.
The challenge is motivating homeowners to take steps. Political and
societal systems influence the action citizens are prepared to take
and what they expect their governments to do. The responsibility
for implementing such measures is shared between the public and the
private domain in different degrees in different countries. This
book will be of great interest to scholars of water law, property
rights, flood risk management and climate adaptation. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Water International.
Financial schemes for flood recovery, if properly designed and
implemented, might increase flood resilience. However, options for
the increase of flood resilience during the recovery phase are to a
large extent overlooked and the diversity of existing schemes shows
that there has been a lack of consensus on how to achieve resilient
flood recovery. Financial Schemes for Resilient Flood Recovery
investigates how the implementation of financial schemes
(government relief subsidies, insurance schemes, buy-outs, etc.)
might increase flood resilience. The chapters included in this
edited volume address the following questions: Shall government
relief subsidies exist when there is flood insurance in place, and,
if so, how might they both be coordinated? Where (or how) to decide
about build back better incentives and where to go for planned
relocation programs? What is the distributional equity of financial
schemes for flood recovery, and has it been sufficiently treated?
The book covers different approaches to flood recovery schemes with
specific intervention rationales in different countries. Empirical
evidence provided clearly shows the great diversity of financial
flood recovery schemes. This diversity of state-funded schemes,
private-based insurance schemes, and hybrids as well as planned
relocation schemes indicates a lack of a consistent and strategic
approach in flood risk management and flood resilience about flood
recovery. The chapters in this book were originally published in
the Environmental Hazards.
Financial schemes for flood recovery, if properly designed and
implemented, might increase flood resilience. However, options for
the increase of flood resilience during the recovery phase are to a
large extent overlooked and the diversity of existing schemes shows
that there has been a lack of consensus on how to achieve resilient
flood recovery. Financial Schemes for Resilient Flood Recovery
investigates how the implementation of financial schemes
(government relief subsidies, insurance schemes, buy-outs, etc.)
might increase flood resilience. The chapters included in this
edited volume address the following questions: Shall government
relief subsidies exist when there is flood insurance in place, and,
if so, how might they both be coordinated? Where (or how) to decide
about build back better incentives and where to go for planned
relocation programs? What is the distributional equity of financial
schemes for flood recovery, and has it been sufficiently treated?
The book covers different approaches to flood recovery schemes with
specific intervention rationales in different countries. Empirical
evidence provided clearly shows the great diversity of financial
flood recovery schemes. This diversity of state-funded schemes,
private-based insurance schemes, and hybrids as well as planned
relocation schemes indicates a lack of a consistent and strategic
approach in flood risk management and flood resilience about flood
recovery. The chapters in this book were originally published in
the Environmental Hazards.
Flood Resilience of Private Properties examines the division and
balance of responsibilities between the public and the private when
discussing flood resilience of private properties. Flooding is an
expensive climate-related disaster and a threat to urban life.
Continuing development in flood-prone zones compound the risks.
Protecting all properties to the same standards is ever more
challenging. Research has focused on improved planning and adapting
publicly-owned infrastructure such as streets, evacuation routes,
and retention ponds. However, damages often happen on private land.
To realize a flood-resilient city, owners of privately-owned
residential houses also need to act. Measures such as mobile
barriers and backwater valves or avoiding vulnerable uses in
basements can make homes more flood-resilient. But private owners
may be unaware of flooding risks or may lack the means and
knowledge to act. Incentives may be insufficient, while fragmented
or unclear property rights and responsibilities entrench inertia.
The challenge is motivating homeowners to take steps. Political and
societal systems influence the action citizens are prepared to take
and what they expect their governments to do. The responsibility
for implementing such measures is shared between the public and the
private domain in different degrees in different countries. This
book will be of great interest to scholars of water law, property
rights, flood risk management and climate adaptation. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Water International.
Property Rights and Climate Change explores the multifarious
relationships between different types of climate-driven
environmental changes and property rights. This original
contribution to the literature examines such climate changes
through the lens of property rights, rather than through the lens
of land use planning. The inherent assumption pursued is that the
different types of environmental changes, with their particular
effects and impact on land use, share common issues regarding the
relation between the social construction of land via property
rights and the dynamics of a changing environment. Making these
common issues explicit and discussing the different approaches to
them is the central objective of this book. Through examining a
variety of cases from the Arctic to the Australian coast, the
contributors take a transdisciplinary look at the winners and
losers of climate change, discuss approaches to dealing with
changing environmental conditions, and stimulate pathways for
further research. This book is essential reading for lawyers,
planners, property rights experts and environmentalists.
Extreme floods cause enormous damage in floodplains, which levees
cannot prevent. Therefore, it is vital for spatial planning to
provide space for water retention in these areas. Land use
planners, water management agencies, landowners, and policymakers
all agree on this challenge, but attempts to make the space for
rivers to provide retention are generally not very successful.
Adopting an innovative interdisciplinary approach, this book
examines how society can manage the use of the floodplains along
rivers in the face of extreme floods, focusing in particular on the
relation between social arrangements and the elemental forces of
floods. The book firstly analyses why contemporary floodplain
management is so often clumsy and ineffective by looking at various
real-life situations in Germany, using Cultural Theory to provide a
much-needed, but previously neglected social perspective. These
analyses show a pattern of activity resulting from different
rationalities which dominate the floodplains in different phases.
During extreme floods, it is rational to manage floodplains as
dangerous areas; sandbags and disaster management dominate the
scene. After some time, the rationality of control takes over the
floodplain management; policymakers discuss flood risk and water
managers build levees. When public attention diminishes,
floodplains become inconspicuous until more and more stakeholders
regard floodplains as profitable land. The current system of
planning, law, and property rights even encourages stakeholders to
act out their plural rationalities. A permanent dynamic imbalance
of different rationalities leads to a robust social construction of
the floodplains which results in viable but clumsy floodplains. In
the course of time, however, the patterns of activity in the
floodplains lead to an increase in intensity and frequency of
extreme floods, and to more vulnerable potential damages in the
floodplains. Risk increases. Coping with this situation needs
another kind of floodplain management. This book proposes an
innovative concept - Large Areas for Temporary Emergency Retention
(LATER) - in "Clumsy Floodplains" as an alternative to levee-based
flood protection. The concept aims at reducing damage by extreme
floods in a catchment area by inundating less valuable areas to
protect places that are more valuable. It finally examines how this
LATER concept might be implemented in areas where there is
currently a clumsy style of floodplain management, what
interventions are required and how these might come about
effectively. Again, using Cultural Theory, the book puts forward a
valuable land policy solution which aims at implementing LATER in
clumsy floodplains and which develops an obligatory insurance
against natural hazards as a responsive land policy for LATER. The
book represents the author's PhD research, which he conducted as
research assistant at the department for Land Policy, Land
Management and Municipal Geoinformation at the School of Spatial
Planning, TU Dortmund University, Germany.
In dealing with scarce land, planners often need to interact with,
and sometimes confront, property right-holders to address complex
property rights situations. To reinforce their position in
situations of rivalrous land uses, planners can strategically use
and combine different policy instruments in addition to standard
land use plans. Effectively steering spatial development requires a
keen understanding of these instruments of land policy. This book
not only presents how such instruments function, it additionally
examines how public authorities strategically manage the scarcity
of land, either increasing or decreasing it, to promote a more
sparing use of resources. It presents 13 instruments of land policy
in specific national contexts and discusses them from the
perspectives of other countries. Through the use of concrete
examples, the book reveals how instruments of land policy are used
strategically in different policy contexts.
Extreme floods cause enormous damage in floodplains, which levees
cannot prevent. Therefore, it is vital for spatial planning to
provide space for water retention in these areas. Land use
planners, water management agencies, landowners, and policymakers
all agree on this challenge, but attempts to make the space for
rivers to provide retention are generally not very successful.
Adopting an innovative interdisciplinary approach, this book
examines how society can manage the use of the floodplains along
rivers in the face of extreme floods, focusing in particular on the
relation between social arrangements and the elemental forces of
floods. The book firstly analyses why contemporary floodplain
management is so often clumsy and ineffective by looking at various
real-life situations in Germany, using Cultural Theory to provide a
much-needed, but previously neglected social perspective. These
analyses show a pattern of activity resulting from different
rationalities which dominate the floodplains in different phases.
During extreme floods, it is rational to manage floodplains as
dangerous areas; sandbags and disaster management dominate the
scene. After some time, the rationality of control takes over the
floodplain management; policymakers discuss flood risk and water
managers build levees. When public attention diminishes,
floodplains become inconspicuous until more and more stakeholders
regard floodplains as profitable land. The current system of
planning, law, and property rights even encourages stakeholders to
act out their plural rationalities. A permanent dynamic imbalance
of different rationalities leads to a robust social construction of
the floodplains which results in viable but clumsy floodplains. In
the course of time, however, the patterns of activity in the
floodplains lead to an increase in intensity and frequency of
extreme floods, and to more vulnerable potential damages in the
floodplains. Risk increases. Coping with this situation needs
another kind of floodplain management. This book proposes an
innovative concept - Large Areas for Temporary Emergency Retention
(LATER) - in "Clumsy Floodplains" as an alternative to levee-based
flood protection. The concept aims at reducing damage by extreme
floods in a catchment area by inundating less valuable areas to
protect places that are more valuable. It finally examines how this
LATER concept might be implemented in areas where there is
currently a clumsy style of floodplain management, what
interventions are required and how these might come about
effectively. Again, using Cultural Theory, the book puts forward a
valuable land policy solution which aims at implementing LATER in
clumsy floodplains and which develops an obligatory insurance
against natural hazards as a responsive land policy for LATER. The
book represents the author's PhD research, which he conducted as
research assistant at the department for Land Policy, Land
Management and Municipal Geoinformation at the School of Spatial
Planning, TU Dortmund University, Germany.
This book provides an overview of the typical nature-based
solutions (NBS) used for flood mitigation at different scales and
in different areas (e.g. from catchment to hillslope scale; from
urban to coastal areas). NBS can provide several ecosystem
services, such as water regulation and water quality enhancement,
and as such offer relevant technical solutions to complement
typical grey infrastructures to mitigate flood hazard and water
quality problems. In recent years, political awareness and interest
from the scientific community have led to increasing implementation
of NBS worldwide. In light of this trend, this book provides
valuable insights into the environmental aspects of NBS,
particularly their effectiveness for flood and pollution
mitigation, and discusses socio-economic aspects related to the
implementation of NBS, including regulatory aspects, cost, and
citizens' perceptions of NBS. Compiling the latest research, the
book furthers our understanding of the role of NBS for flood
mitigation and its relation to environmental aspects, to guide
scientists and stakeholders in future NBS projects. It is intended
for the scientific community and stakeholders, such as spatial
planners and landscape managers. Chapter "Nature-based solutions
for flood mitigation and resilience in urban areas" is available
open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License via link.springer.com.
A society that intensifies and expands the use of land and water in
urban areas needs to search for solutions to manage the frontiers
between these two essential elements for urban living. Sustainable
governance of land and water is one of the major challenges of our
times. Managing retention areas for floods and droughts, designing
resilient urban waterfronts, implementing floating homes, or
managing wastewater in shrinking cities are just a few examples
where spatial planning steps into the governance arena of water
management and vice versa. However, water management and spatial
planning pursue different modes of governance, and therefore the
frontiers between the two disciplines require developing approaches
for setting up governance schemes for sustainable cities of the
future. What are the particularities of the governance of land and
water? What is the role of regional and local spatial planning?
What institutional barriers may arise? This book focuses on
questions such as these, and covers groundwater governance, water
supply and wastewater treatment, urban riverscapes, urban flooding,
flood risk management, and concepts of resilience. The project
resulted from a Summer School by the German Academy for Spatial
Research and Planning (ARL) organized by the editors at Utrecht
University in 2013. This book was published as a special issue of
Water International.
A society that intensifies and expands the use of land and water in
urban areas needs to search for solutions to manage the frontiers
between these two essential elements for urban living. Sustainable
governance of land and water is one of the major challenges of our
times. Managing retention areas for floods and droughts, designing
resilient urban waterfronts, implementing floating homes, or
managing wastewater in shrinking cities are just a few examples
where spatial planning steps into the governance arena of water
management and vice versa. However, water management and spatial
planning pursue different modes of governance, and therefore the
frontiers between the two disciplines require developing approaches
for setting up governance schemes for sustainable cities of the
future. What are the particularities of the governance of land and
water? What is the role of regional and local spatial planning?
What institutional barriers may arise? This book focuses on
questions such as these, and covers groundwater governance, water
supply and wastewater treatment, urban riverscapes, urban flooding,
flood risk management, and concepts of resilience. The project
resulted from a Summer School by the German Academy for Spatial
Research and Planning (ARL) organized by the editors at Utrecht
University in 2013. This book was published as a special issue of
Water International.
Countries which take spatial planning seriously should take
planning law and property rights also seriously. There is an
unavoidable logical relationship between planning, law, and
property rights. However, planning by law and property rights is so
familiar and taken for granted that we do not think about the
theory behind it. As a result, we do not think abstractly about its
strengths and weaknesses, about what can be achieved with it and
what not, how it can be improved, how it could be complemented.
Such reflections are essential to cope with current and future
challenges to spatial planning. This book makes the (often
implicit) theory behind planning by law and property rights
explicit and relates it to those challenges. It starts by setting
out what is understood by planning by law and property rights, and
investigates - theoretically and by game simulation - the
relationships between planning law and property rights. It then
places planning law and property rights within their institutional
setting at three different scales: when a country undergoes
enormous social and political change, when there is fundamental
political debate about the power of the state within a country, and
when a country changes its legislation in response to European
policy. Not only changing institutions, but also global
environmental change, pose huge challenges for spatial planning.
The book discusses how planning by law and property rights can
respond to those challenges: by adaptive planning), by adaptable
property rights, and by public policies at the appropriate
geographical level. Planning by law and property rights can fix a
local regime of property rights which turns out to be inappropriate
but difficult to change. It questions whether such regimes can be
changed and whether planning agencies can make such undesirable
lock-ins less likely by reducing market uncertainty and, if so, by
what means.
Due to their business activities, banks are exposed to many
different risk types. Peter Grundke shows how various risk
exposures can be aggregated to a comprehensive risk position.
Furthermore, computational problems of determining a loss
distribution that comprises various risk types are analyzed.
Planning, Law and Economics sets out a new framework for applying a
legal approach to spatial planning, showing how to improve the
practice and help achieve its aims. The book covers planning laws,
citizens' rights and property rights, asking 'What rules do we want
to make and, where necessary, enforce? And how do we want to apply
them in planning practice?' This book sets out, in general and
illustrated with concrete examples, how the three types of law
mentioned above are unavoidably involved in all types of spatial
planning. The book also makes clear that these laws can be combined
in different ways, each way a particular approach to the practice
of spatial planning (regulative planning, structuring markets,
pro-active planning, collaborative planning, etc.). Throughout, the
book shows what legal approaches can be taken to spatial planning,
and uses a four-part framework to evaluate the effects of choosing
such an approach. The spatial planning should be effective,
legitimate, morally just and economically sound. In particular the
book details why the economic effects for society are important and
how spatial planning affects how the economic resources of land and
buildings are used. The book will be invaluable to students and
planners to understand the relationship between their actions and
the basic principles of the rule of law in a democratic, liberal
society.
Planning, Law and Economics sets out a new framework for applying a
legal approach to spatial planning, showing how to improve the
practice and help achieve its aims. The book covers planning laws,
citizens' rights and property rights, asking 'What rules do we want
to make and, where necessary, enforce? And how do we want to apply
them in planning practice?' This book sets out, in general and
illustrated with concrete examples, how the three types of law
mentioned above are unavoidably involved in all types of spatial
planning. The book also makes clear that these laws can be combined
in different ways, each way a particular approach to the practice
of spatial planning (regulative planning, structuring markets,
pro-active planning, collaborative planning, etc.). Throughout, the
book shows what legal approaches can be taken to spatial planning,
and uses a four-part framework to evaluate the effects of choosing
such an approach. The spatial planning should be effective,
legitimate, morally just and economically sound. In particular the
book details why the economic effects for society are important and
how spatial planning affects how the economic resources of land and
buildings are used. The book will be invaluable to students and
planners to understand the relationship between their actions and
the basic principles of the rule of law in a democratic, liberal
society.
In dealing with scarce land, planners often need to interact with,
and sometimes confront, property right-holders to address complex
property rights situations. To reinforce their position in
situations of rivalrous land uses, planners can strategically use
and combine different policy instruments in addition to standard
land use plans. Effectively steering spatial development requires a
keen understanding of these instruments of land policy. This book
not only presents how such instruments function, it additionally
examines how public authorities strategically manage the scarcity
of land, either increasing or decreasing it, to promote a more
sparing use of resources. It presents 13 instruments of land policy
in specific national contexts and discusses them from the
perspectives of other countries. Through the use of concrete
examples, the book reveals how instruments of land policy are used
strategically in different policy contexts.
Countries which take spatial planning seriously should take
planning law and property rights also seriously. There is an
unavoidable logical relationship between planning, law, and
property rights. However, planning by law and property rights is so
familiar and taken for granted that we do not think about the
theory behind it. As a result, we do not think abstractly about its
strengths and weaknesses, about what can be achieved with it and
what not, how it can be improved, how it could be complemented.
Such reflections are essential to cope with current and future
challenges to spatial planning. This book makes the (often
implicit) theory behind planning by law and property rights
explicit and relates it to those challenges. It starts by setting
out what is understood by planning by law and property rights, and
investigates - theoretically and by game simulation - the
relationships between planning law and property rights. It then
places planning law and property rights within their institutional
setting at three different scales: when a country undergoes
enormous social and political change, when there is fundamental
political debate about the power of the state within a country, and
when a country changes its legislation in response to European
policy. Not only changing institutions, but also global
environmental change, pose huge challenges for spatial planning.
The book discusses how planning by law and property rights can
respond to those challenges: by adaptive planning), by adaptable
property rights, and by public policies at the appropriate
geographical level. Planning by law and property rights can fix a
local regime of property rights which turns out to be inappropriate
but difficult to change. It questions whether such regimes can be
changed and whether planning agencies can make such undesirable
lock-ins less likely by reducing market uncertainty and, if so, by
what means.
This open access book addresses the various disciplinary aspects of
nature-based solutions in flood risk management on private land. In
recent decades, water management has been moving towards
nature-based solutions. These are assumed to be much more
multi-purpose than traditional "grey infrastructures" and seem to
be regarded as a panacea for many environmental issues. At the same
time, such measures require more - and mostly privately owned -
land and more diverse stakeholder involvement than traditional
(grey) engineering approaches. They also present challenges related
to different disciplines. Nature-based solutions for flood risk
management not only require technical expertise, but also call for
interdisciplinary insights from land-use planning, economics,
property rights, sociology, landscape planning, ecology, hydrology,
agriculture and other disciplines to address the challenges of
implementing them. Ultimately, nature-based flood risk management
is a multi-disciplinary endeavor. Featuring numerous case studies
of nature-based flood risk management accompanied by commentaries,
this book presents brief academic reflections from two different
disciplinary perspectives that critically highlight which specific
aspects are of significance, and as such, underscore the
multi-disciplinary nature of the challenges faced.
This book provides an important overview of how climate-driven
natural hazards like river or pluvial floods, droughts, heat waves
or forest fires, continue to play a central role across the globe
in the 21st century. Urban resilience has become an important term
in response to climate change. Resilience describes the ability of
a system to absorb shocks and depends on the vulnerability and
recovery time of a system. A shock affects a system to the extent
that it becomes vulnerable to the event. This book focus examines
how private property-owners might implement such measures or
improve their individual coping and adaptive capacity to respond to
future events. The book looks at the existence of various planning,
legal, financial incentives and psychological factors designed to
encourage individuals to take an active role in natural hazard risk
management and through the presentation of theoretical discussions
and empirical cases shows how urban resilience can be achieved. In
addition, the book guides the reader through different conceptual
frameworks by showing how urban regions are trying to reach urban
resilience on privately-owned land. Each chapter focuses on
different cultural, socio-economic and political backgrounds to
demonstrate how different institutional frameworks have an impact.
Die Beitrage zu diesem Band streben eine Integration von
Grundproblemen der Unternehmensfuhrung mit der Kapitalmarkttheorie
an. Von besonderem Interesse sind dabei Fragen der
Unternehmensbewertung und der Bewertung von Investitionsstrategien
sowie einzelner Finanzierungstitel. Zahlreiche Tabellen und
graphische Darstellungen veranschaulichen die Ausfuhrungen.
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