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A developing country perspective on the adaptive capacity: flood defence institutions for climate change adaption in Indonesia

Yunita, F.T. (2010) A developing country perspective on the adaptive capacity: flood defence institutions for climate change adaption in Indonesia. Master thesis.

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Abstract

Mitigation have not given any real results. Adaptation becomes more favorable approach. However, climate changes issue is not popular for the current institutions. Whilst many cities have already suffered from its impact, the concept literature is less from developing countries. International lessons learn revealed that: variety needs good coordination; institutions are difficult to change; flexibility requires control; Water manager and planner are important leader; there is significant gap of resources between two worlds; basic right protection is weak in developing countries. The adaptive capacity dimensions are found insufficient in BPPP. No variety in problem frames and solutions. Learning is only one-direction, central/expert to community. Room for autonomous change is limited because of less information access, law enforcement, and high dependency. Central acts as entrepreneurial and collaborative leader, the advocacy leader is missing. Local contribution in financing and human resources is low. Fair governance is forced by donor institutions.

Item Type: Thesis (Master)
Degree programme: Environmental & Infrastructure Planning
Supervisor: Brink, M. Van den
Date Deposited: 23 Apr 2020 05:29
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2020 05:29
URI: https://frw.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/id/eprint/1577

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