Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management

<p>This thesis examines the role of the public in Flood Risk Management (FRM) service provision at a time when the perceptions of the distribution of benefits provided by FRM interventions are in flux, and the role the public should play in FRM highly contested among stakeholders. Two schemes ha...

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Main Author: Geaves, L
Other Authors: Hall, J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
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author Geaves, L
author2 Hall, J
author_facet Hall, J
Geaves, L
author_sort Geaves, L
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis examines the role of the public in Flood Risk Management (FRM) service provision at a time when the perceptions of the distribution of benefits provided by FRM interventions are in flux, and the role the public should play in FRM highly contested among stakeholders. Two schemes have marked the revised role of the public in FRM – Partnership Funding and Flood Re – both of which challenge existing judgments of the excludability and rivalry of benefits delivered by FRM interventions. The Partnership Funding scheme allocates capital for FRM projects proportionately to the public benefits they provide, allowing communities to top-up grants through local contributions. In comparison, by increasing accessibility to affordable insurance through cross-subsidies and pricing signals, Flood Re highlights a growing recognition that the distribution of gains as a result of widespread insurance uptake is greater than the benefits received by the policyholder alone. Following the identification of these schemes, we tested their social feasibility, examining both the scale and distribution of benefits. Due to the different stages of implementation of each scheme at the time of writing this thesis, two distinct methods were developed. The Partnership Funding Chapter used field data to examine how public-private funding of flood defences has changed service provision and the public acceptance of this transition. Whereas the Flood Re chapter used computer-based experiments to hypothesize how Flood Re may make the purchase of insurance a more or less attractive investment for different types of consumer. We found that Partnership Funding enabled more FRM projects to go ahead, raised public awareness of flood risk, and improved collaboration between stakeholders, but encouraged lower-cost projects, which, in the longer term, could transfer the expense of managing residual risk to the householder. In comparison, Flood Re provided peace of mind to householders struggling to afford rises in insurance premiums, but disproportionately benefited those who annually purchased insurance. Combining this proposed inequity in Flood Re with increasing residual risks, we identify a gap in service provision for the public who cannot afford household mitigation measures. We propose that loss mitigation and flood defence should become increasingly collaborative in line with the complexities of flooding within a community. We seek a move away from the information asymmetry which currently exists between insurance providers and policyholders, and yet simultaneously call for local authorities to recognise the capacity of the public to participate in FRM, and sustain resilience in the face of rising flood risk.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:6a5de60c-1920-403e-aaf7-0c8b8655edef2022-03-26T18:57:08ZPublic priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk managementThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:6a5de60c-1920-403e-aaf7-0c8b8655edefMultiagent systemsPublic goodsFlood insuranceComputer scienceEconomics--Psychological aspectsSocial contractFloodsGeographyEnglishORA Deposit2016Geaves, LHall, J<p>This thesis examines the role of the public in Flood Risk Management (FRM) service provision at a time when the perceptions of the distribution of benefits provided by FRM interventions are in flux, and the role the public should play in FRM highly contested among stakeholders. Two schemes have marked the revised role of the public in FRM – Partnership Funding and Flood Re – both of which challenge existing judgments of the excludability and rivalry of benefits delivered by FRM interventions. The Partnership Funding scheme allocates capital for FRM projects proportionately to the public benefits they provide, allowing communities to top-up grants through local contributions. In comparison, by increasing accessibility to affordable insurance through cross-subsidies and pricing signals, Flood Re highlights a growing recognition that the distribution of gains as a result of widespread insurance uptake is greater than the benefits received by the policyholder alone. Following the identification of these schemes, we tested their social feasibility, examining both the scale and distribution of benefits. Due to the different stages of implementation of each scheme at the time of writing this thesis, two distinct methods were developed. The Partnership Funding Chapter used field data to examine how public-private funding of flood defences has changed service provision and the public acceptance of this transition. Whereas the Flood Re chapter used computer-based experiments to hypothesize how Flood Re may make the purchase of insurance a more or less attractive investment for different types of consumer. We found that Partnership Funding enabled more FRM projects to go ahead, raised public awareness of flood risk, and improved collaboration between stakeholders, but encouraged lower-cost projects, which, in the longer term, could transfer the expense of managing residual risk to the householder. In comparison, Flood Re provided peace of mind to householders struggling to afford rises in insurance premiums, but disproportionately benefited those who annually purchased insurance. Combining this proposed inequity in Flood Re with increasing residual risks, we identify a gap in service provision for the public who cannot afford household mitigation measures. We propose that loss mitigation and flood defence should become increasingly collaborative in line with the complexities of flooding within a community. We seek a move away from the information asymmetry which currently exists between insurance providers and policyholders, and yet simultaneously call for local authorities to recognise the capacity of the public to participate in FRM, and sustain resilience in the face of rising flood risk.</p>
spellingShingle Multiagent systems
Public goods
Flood insurance
Computer science
Economics--Psychological aspects
Social contract
Floods
Geography
Geaves, L
Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title_full Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title_fullStr Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title_full_unstemmed Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title_short Public priorities and public goods: the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
title_sort public priorities and public goods the drivers and responses to transitions in flood risk management
topic Multiagent systems
Public goods
Flood insurance
Computer science
Economics--Psychological aspects
Social contract
Floods
Geography
work_keys_str_mv AT geavesl publicprioritiesandpublicgoodsthedriversandresponsestotransitionsinfloodriskmanagement