Vacating the Floodplain: Urban Property, Engineering, and Floods in Brisbane (1974-2011)

被引:10
作者
Cook, Margaret [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
关键词
Brisbane River; floods; planning; urban development; flood mitigation; hazard; dam; floodplain; Queensland; Australia; RIVER;
D O I
10.4103/cs.cs_16_95
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
This article exposes the dominant socio-economic and political values that shaped flood management between 1974 and 2011 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. By the 1970s, international hazard scholarship advocated regulating land use as an effective flood mitigation tool. In 1974, floods devastated Southeast Queensland and highlighted the hazards of building on floodplains. Drawing on scholarship that frames floods as a cultural, rather than natural event, this paper shows that the state government of Queensland prioritised property development and continued to rely on dam building as a way of controlling floods. Dams were built with the aim of providing immunity from flooding, but tensions between State and local governments allowed both to evade responsibility for the growing hazard arising from continuing development in the floodplain. When legislation and regulations were introduced to control floodplain development, they reflected popular sentiment against land use restrictions and hence were limited in scope, non-mandatory, and riddled with loopholes. The results of these inadequate land use regulations and continued residential development below the 100-year flood level were fully exposed in 2011 when a substantial increase in damages accompanied flooding of the Brisbane River. Despite evidence and predictions of increased risk of more frequent and larger floods from a warming climate, both state and local governments have continued to promote development in the Brisbane River floodplain, and appear willing to subject the city and its residents to increased hazards and vulnerability.
引用
收藏
页码:344 / 354
页数:11
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1992, Nature's metropolis: Chicago and the great west
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2000, 73 SCARM
[3]  
Bjelke-Petersen Johannes, 1990, DONT YOU WORRY, P76
[4]  
Blackbourn David., 2006, The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany
[5]  
Blaikie P., 2003, At risk: Natural hazards, peoples vulnerability and disasters, V2nd
[6]  
Bolton Geoffrey, 1981, SPOILS AND SPOILERS
[7]   Natural and unnatural complexities: flood control along Manitoba's Assiniboine River [J].
Bower, Shannon Stunden .
JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2010, 36 (01) :57-67
[8]   The production of flood as natural catastrophe: Extreme events and the construction of vulnerability in the drainage basin of the St. Francis River (Quebec), mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth century [J].
Castonguay, Stephane .
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY, 2007, 12 (04) :820-844
[9]  
Cathcart Michael, 2009, The Water Dreamers: The Remarkable History of Our Dry Continent
[10]  
Chrichton D., 2012, FLOOD HAZARDS IMPACT, P155