2020
DOI: 10.1007/978-981-15-8783-2_23
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Collaborative Approach for Community Resilience to Natural Disaster: Perspectives on Flood Risk Management in Jakarta, Indonesia

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Another research investigated how governments, non-governmental organizations and at-risk communities perceive flood risk and collaborate in flood risk management decision-making processes. They revealed that divergent perceptions of flood risk between at-risk communities and the governments impede realization of flood risk reduction goals [ 42 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another research investigated how governments, non-governmental organizations and at-risk communities perceive flood risk and collaborate in flood risk management decision-making processes. They revealed that divergent perceptions of flood risk between at-risk communities and the governments impede realization of flood risk reduction goals [ 42 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It can affect the likelihood of floods and its consequential damage (Neuvel & van den Brink, 2009;White & Richards, 2007) The emergence of Law 23/2014 resulted in the right and obligatory sharing between central and local government, known as Decentralization. Decentralization and power-sharing expanded disaster management responsibility at local levels with national and international policy impacting it (Sunarharum et al, 2021). Since Ciliwung River Basin flows along transboundary regions, central, provincial as well as city governments and plans are responsible for flood risk management.…”
Section: Framework Of Flood Risk Driversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as flood risk management involves various stakeholders (i.e., governments, communities, academics, media, and privates) and multiple objectives, conflicts may also arise. Up until recently, the coordination among stakeholders in the Ciliwung River Basin still meets many challenges and as a result, affects the decision-making (Sunarharum et al, 2021) https This study adopts several drivers related to the Ciliwung River flood case based on the framework Table 1 and Figure 1, with a few modifications in terms, as shown in Table 2 below. There are thirteen variables identified to be the drivers of the Ciliwung Key River Flood.…”
Section: Framework Of Flood Risk Driversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Woldesenbet (2018) postulated that a low degree of cross-sectoral cooperation among different partners caused many water quality issues in Addis Ababa Rivers. Sunarharum, Sloan, and Susilawati (2021) emphasised that plenty of challenges in the coordinated effort with risk management. Somehow, Avoyan and Meijerink (2021) contended that the reconciliation and coordination of policies across sectors, just as a joint measure between strategy spaces, are of expanding significance for the two researchers and policymakers.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%