Abstract

AbstractThis article evaluates the current gaps and describes opportunities for improving flood risk management (FRM) in Ghana, West Africa. A mixed‐method participatory approach comprising questionnaires, workshops, interviews with key stakeholders, and a systematic literature review were employed. Existing problems, discourses, FRM practices, and opportunities to enhance flood resilience were identified. They provided the basis for outlining potential research directions into ways of tracking these challenges. The results show how different actors perceive FRM in Ghana. The stakeholders interviewed have different, and even contradictory perceptions of the effectiveness of FRM, which are embedded in their diverse storylines. The findings show that Ghana's FRM is still reactive rather than preventive and that research in the field of quantitative hazard and risk assessment is still rudimentary. FRM policies and flood early warning systems (FEWS) are in place, but efforts should be directed towards their implementation and monitoring, investigation of social and technical capacity aspects, and enhancement of institutions’ mandates, and coordination. Moreover, the findings illustrate that FRM is moving toward a more constructive engagement of citizens and stakeholders. However, policies and action plans need to consider more inclusive community participation in planning and management to effectively improve their resilience and develop sustainable solutions.

Highlights

  • A reason for this increase may be a reflection of a growing awareness of flood risk prevention and reduction policies in West Africa (Adegoke, Sylla, Bossa, Ogunjobi, & Adounkpe, 2019)

  • Based on the review of 53 articles and a participatory process including an online survey, a workshop with 29 stakeholders and interviews with 20 key institutions, it was found that several sociotechnical strategies are in place for dealing with floods in Ghana; these include flood early warning systems (FEWS) in some communities, programmes for increasing public awareness and vulnerability maps for selected areas

  • The municipalities of Accra, Kumasi and the Upper East region were identified as the most critical regions, with relatively few studies conducted in the White Volta and Black Volta river basins

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Summary

Introduction

Adrian Almoradie and Mariana Madruga de Brito contributed to this study. In 2017, Ghana experienced extreme floods that affected about 1 million people (Adegoke et al, 2019; IFRC, 2017). In 2018, floods caused by high-intensity rainfall combined with water releases from the Bagre Dam in Burkina Faso affected 100,000 people and destroyed 196 km of farmland (FLOODLIST, 2018). In 2015, Accra experienced a cascade disaster of floods and fire, driven by both natural and human factors. Due to a cigarette dropped into flood water that had fuel on the surface, a state-owned gasoline station exploded, claiming the lives of 152 people and damaging properties worth millions of dollars (Quarshie et al, 2018; Yankson, Owusu, Owusu, Boakye-Danquah, & Tetteh, 2017)

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