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Self‐stated recovery from flooding: Empirical results from a survey in Central Vietnam


Documents and publications
Author(s)
Hudson, Paul; Pham, My; Hagedoorn, Liselotte et al.
Source
Journal of Flood Risk Management (Wiley)
Publication Year
2021
ISBN/ISSN/DOI
10.1111/jfr3.12680 (DOI)
Number of pages
15 p.

Social inequalities lead to flood resilience inequalities across social groups, a topic that requires improved documentation and understanding. The objective of this paper is to attend to these differences by investigating self‐stated flood recovery across genders in Vietnam as a conceptual replication of earlier results from Germany.

This study, therefore, conceptually replicates previous results suggesting that women display slightly slower recovery levels as well as that psychological variables influence recovery rates more than adverse flood impacts. This provides an indication of the results' potentially robust nature due to the different socio‐environmental contexts in Germany and Vietnam.

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Related information
Related links
Understanding and assessing flood risk in Vietnam: Current status, persisting gaps, and future directions
Long-term improvement in precautions for flood risk mitigation: A case study in the low-lying area of central Vietnam
Ecosystem-based adaptation to increase flood resilience of vulnerable people - Evidence from central Vietnam
Urban development and flood risk in Vietnam: Experience in three cities
Strong roots, strong women: Women and ecosystem-based adaptation to flood risk in Central Vietnam
Keywords
Hazards
Flood
Themes
Recovery
Country & Region
Germany
Viet Nam

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