TY - JOUR
T1 - Bridging science and practice on multi-hazard risk drivers
T2 - stakeholder insights from five pilot studies in Europe
AU - van Maanen, Nicole
AU - de Ruiter, Marleen
AU - Jäger, Wiebke
AU - Casartelli, Veronica
AU - Ciurean, Roxana
AU - Padrón-Fumero, Noemi
AU - Daloz, Anne Sophie
AU - Geurts, David
AU - Gottardo, Stefania
AU - Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan
AU - López Diez, Abel
AU - Pacheco, Jaime Díaz
AU - Antequera, Pedro Dorta
AU - Arévalo, Tamara Febles
AU - González, Sara García
AU - Hernández-Martín, Raúl
AU - Alvarez-Albelo, Carmen
AU - Diaz-Hernandez, Juan José
AU - Ma, Lin
AU - Monteleone, Letizia
AU - Reiter, Karina
AU - Stolte, Tristian
AU - Trogrlić, Robert Šakić
AU - Torresan, Silvia
AU - Tatman, Sharon
AU - de Lara, David Romero Manrique
AU - González, Yeray Hernández
AU - Ward, Philip J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Effective disaster risk management requires approaches that account for multiple interacting hazards, dynamic vulnerabilities, and institutional complexity. Yet many existing risk assessment methods struggle to reflect how these risks evolve in practice. This paper explores multi-hazard risk dynamics through stakeholder interviews across five European regions (Veneto, Scandinavia, the North Sea, the Danube Region, and the Canary Islands). Stakeholders described how exposure and vulnerability shift over time due to climate change, urban development, and socio-economic dependencies. The interviews highlight governance challenges and the critical role of institutional coordination, as well as synergies and asynergies in DRR measures, where efforts to reduce one risk can unintentionally increase another. By foregrounding real-world experiences across diverse hazard landscapes and sectors, this study offers empirical insights into how multi-hazard risk is perceived and managed. It underscores the need for flexible, context-sensitive strategies that bridge scientific assessment with decision-making on the ground.
AB - Effective disaster risk management requires approaches that account for multiple interacting hazards, dynamic vulnerabilities, and institutional complexity. Yet many existing risk assessment methods struggle to reflect how these risks evolve in practice. This paper explores multi-hazard risk dynamics through stakeholder interviews across five European regions (Veneto, Scandinavia, the North Sea, the Danube Region, and the Canary Islands). Stakeholders described how exposure and vulnerability shift over time due to climate change, urban development, and socio-economic dependencies. The interviews highlight governance challenges and the critical role of institutional coordination, as well as synergies and asynergies in DRR measures, where efforts to reduce one risk can unintentionally increase another. By foregrounding real-world experiences across diverse hazard landscapes and sectors, this study offers empirical insights into how multi-hazard risk is perceived and managed. It underscores the need for flexible, context-sensitive strategies that bridge scientific assessment with decision-making on the ground.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105025567652
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=105025567652&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5194/esd-16-2295-2025
DO - 10.5194/esd-16-2295-2025
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105025567652
SN - 2190-4979
VL - 16
SP - 2295
EP - 2311
JO - Earth System Dynamics
JF - Earth System Dynamics
IS - 6
ER -