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Assessment Of Flood Resilience Of Blantyre City Using Flood Resilience Index

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dc.contributor.author Tembo Chimzinga, William Greenford
dc.date.accessioned 2024-09-26T10:31:36Z
dc.date.available 2024-09-26T10:31:36Z
dc.date.issued 2021-05-01
dc.identifier.citation APA en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/982
dc.description The article assesses the flood resilience of Blantyre City in Malawi using a Flood Resilience Index (FRI). It identifies that the city's resilience is very low, with only 5 out of 33 urban dimensions performing adequately. The study recommends 49 strategies from existing literature to enhance flood risk management and resilience in the city, urging local authorities to improve efforts in this area. en_US
dc.description.abstract Floods rank the highest in frequency and impact of all natural hazards worldwide. They have to-date affected more than 2 billion people, the worst in cities owing to their high infrastructural economic values. Efforts to prevent and mitigate this challenge exist with the aim of building resilience to floods through flood risk management (FRM). The building of resilience to floods requires benchmarks in form of flood resilience metrics, which are phenomenal for efforts’ accountability and decision-making. This study was performed to assess resilience of Blantyre City in Southern Malawi to floods using flood resilience index (FRI), which employed a questionnaire and quantitative analyses. Prior to the assessment, the City’s urban dimensions were analysed using key informant interviews. In furtherance, flood resilience strategies were explored from a body of literature to highlight strategies suitable for the City’s flood risk management. Consequently, city dimensions were very low, where only 5/33-dimensional variables achieved at least 50% of best performance. The City’s FRI was at 1.97 (39.4%) representing very low flood resilience, according to FRI ratings. This showed that authorities and stakeholders such as Blantyre City Council needed to upscale their efforts to improve the City’s flood resilience. Flood resilience strategies explored from thirty-nine (39) sources turned out forty-nine (49) strategies suitable for Blantyre City, which we recommend its stakeholders to practise thereby enhancing the City’s resilience to floods. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Malawi - The Polytechnic en_US
dc.subject Flood resilience en_US
dc.subject Flood risk management (FRM) en_US
dc.subject Natural hazards en_US
dc.subject Flood prevention strategies en_US
dc.subject Environmental Science en_US
dc.subject William Greenford Tembo Chimzinga en_US
dc.subject Master of Science degree in Environmental Protection and Management (MSc. EPM) en_US
dc.subject Department of Physics and Biochemical Sciences en_US
dc.subject Faculty of Applied Sciences en_US
dc.title Assessment Of Flood Resilience Of Blantyre City Using Flood Resilience Index en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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