Abstract

Participatory approaches to urban flood risk adaptation initiatives have been prominent amongst developed countries, particularly in Europe, since the 2000s and are now steadily on the rise in the Global South. In this article we focus on how international examples of community-based participatory research and practice have managed flooding risk mitigation and adaptation strategies, specifically in the Global South. While top-down resistance-based approaches that include infrastructure, technology, laws and regulations offer invaluable information for urban planners and policy-makers they however fall short on revealing the perceptions and behaviours that shape individual, household and community adaptation decision-making process. In addition, these top-down approaches tend to take a long-term view of change with new programmes or policies, implemented over time, failing to tackle current challenges. The aim of this scoping review is therefore to map out the key concepts underpinning this research area and the main sources of evidence addressing community-based flooding monitoring, mitigation and adaptation strategies to uncover practices that facilitate participatory models of working between researchers, urban developers/designers, government institutions, and local communities. Finally, this evidence-based synthesis serves as background to the presentation of a Mexican case-study in which a community-based participatory approach is employed to support a co-production process for the identification of local flood risk management options.

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