Local Government Capacity and Land Use Planning for Natural Hazards: A Comparative Evaluation of Australian Local Government Areas | Natural Hazards Research Australia

Local Government Capacity and Land Use Planning for Natural Hazards: A Comparative Evaluation of Australian Local Government Areas

This study assessed the capacity of local governments in Australia to plan for natural hazards.

Research theme

Resilient communities

Publication type

Journal Article

Published date

05/2021

Author James McGregor , Melissa Parsons , Sonya Glavac
Abstract

Global and national strategy emphasises land use planning as a key mechanism for disaster risk reduction (DRR). The practice of planning for natural hazards is devolved to local levels, making the capacity of local government critical for achieving strategic DRR goals. This study assessed the capacity of local governments in Australia to plan for natural hazards. Many Local Government Areas (LGAs) had satisfactory or good hazard planning provision, but remoteness, land area and council size influence poor hazard planning provision. Strategic intent for land use planning as a DRR mechanism is unlikely to be successful in many LGAs without first addressing place-based capacity constraints on hazard planning.

Year of Publication
2021
Journal
Planning Practice & Research
Date Published
05/2021
URL
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02697459.2021.1919431
DOI
10.1080/02697459.2021.1919431
Locators Google Scholar | DOI

Related projects

Project
The Australian Disaster Resilience Index