Addressing Pluvial Flash Flooding through Community-Based Collaborative Research in Tijuana, Mexico

Pluvial flash flooding (PFF) is a growing hazard facing cities around the world as a result of rapid urbanization and more intense precipitation from global warming, particularly for low-resourced settings in developing countries. We present collaborative modeling (CM) as an iterative process to mee...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water (Basel) 2020-05, Vol.12 (5), p.1257
Hauptverfasser: Goodrich, Kristen A., Basolo, Victoria, Feldman, David L., Matthew, Richard A., Schubert, Jochen E., Luke, Adam, Eguiarte, Ana, Boudreau, Dani, Serrano, Kimberly, Reyes, Abigail S., Contreras, Santina, Houston, Douglas, Cheung, Wing, AghaKouchak, Amir, Sanders, Brett F.
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container_end_page
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1257
container_title Water (Basel)
container_volume 12
creator Goodrich, Kristen A.
Basolo, Victoria
Feldman, David L.
Matthew, Richard A.
Schubert, Jochen E.
Luke, Adam
Eguiarte, Ana
Boudreau, Dani
Serrano, Kimberly
Reyes, Abigail S.
Contreras, Santina
Houston, Douglas
Cheung, Wing
AghaKouchak, Amir
Sanders, Brett F.
description Pluvial flash flooding (PFF) is a growing hazard facing cities around the world as a result of rapid urbanization and more intense precipitation from global warming, particularly for low-resourced settings in developing countries. We present collaborative modeling (CM) as an iterative process to meet diverse decision-making needs related to PFF through the co-production of flood hazard models and maps. CM resulted in a set of flood hazard maps accessible through an online viewer that end-users found useful and useable for understanding PFF threats, including debris blockages and barriers to mobility and evacuation. End-users of information included individuals concerned with general flood awareness and preparedness, and involved in infrastructure and emergency management, planning, and policy. CM also showed that rain-on-grid hydrodynamic modeling is needed to depict PFF threats in ways that are intuitive to end-users. These outcomes evidence the importance and transferability of public health rationale for community-based research and principles used here including recognizing community as a unit of identity, building on strengths of the community, and integrating knowledge for the benefit of all partners.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/w12051257
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source Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
subjects Action research
Cities
Climate change
Collaboration
Decision making
Developing countries
Emergency management
Emergency preparedness
Flash floods
Flood hazards
Flood management
Flood mapping
Flooding
Floods
Global warming
Knowledge
LDCs
Methods
Modelling
Precipitation
Psychological aspects
Public health
Rainfall
Researchers
Social aspects
Stormwater management
Urbanization
title Addressing Pluvial Flash Flooding through Community-Based Collaborative Research in Tijuana, Mexico
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