Discourse of Flood Management Approaches and Policies in Bangladesh: Mapping the Changes, Drivers, and Actors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Underpinnings of Floods and Water Management Policy: Progressions and Shifts
3. Methods
4. Evolution and Change in Flood Control and Prevention, and Water Management Policies in Bangladesh: A Historical Account
4.1. Structural Phase (1947 to 1987): Large- and Small-scale Engineering Schemes
4.2. Structural and Nonstructural Phase (1987 to 1995): Flood Action Plan (FAP) Regime
4.3. Post-FAP Phase (1995 to Present): Towards an Integrated and Participatory Flood and Water Management Policy
5. Drivers of Policy Change
5.1. Drivers of Incremental Policy Change
5.2. Drivers of Radical Shifts in Policy
6. Role of Actors in Policy Discourse
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Policy Regimes | Flood Events | Institutional Initiatives | Plans/Policies/Acts | Key Policy Intervention | Policy Debate | Nature of Policy Change | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Structural phase (1947 to 1987): Large-scale and small-scale engineering schemes | 1954 and 1955 | East Pakistan Water and Power Development Authority, 1959 | The “Krug Mission” report and technical report of UNDP Master Plan 1964 | Protection of riverbank and flood through large scale constructions | None | Baseline policy | |
A Master Plan Organization 1983 | ‘The Land and Water Resources Sector’ (WB) | Drafting a National Water Plan (NWP) | None | Layering | |||
National Water Resources Council (NWRC) 1983 | None | Inter-ministerial coordination of water-related policies and responding to regional challenges | None | Conversion | |||
Structural and nonstructural phase (1987–1995): Flood Action Plan (FAP) regime | 1987 and 1988 | Flood Plan Coordination Organization (FPCO) | The Flood Action Plan (FAP) 1989; National Water Policy, 1991 | Permanent solutions to floods through structural mechanisms Emphasis on river training, floodproofing, and warning | FAP Debate (Technocratic approach) | Layering-exhaustion | |
Water Resources Planning Organization (WARPO) 1992; | The Bangladesh water and flood management strategy (BWFMS) 1996 | The involvement of all stakeholders in the implementation phases of projects | |||||
Disaster Management Bureau in 1993 | |||||||
Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief 1994 | |||||||
Post-FAP phase (1995–present) | 1998, 2007 | The National Water Policy (NWP), 2000; Bangladesh Water Act ratified, 2013 | Integration of structural and nonstructural solutions for the protection of lives, properties, and infrastructure from floods | Inter-ministerial Debate on flood policies | Multiple layering | ||
Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief (MoDMR) 2012 | The Standing Order on Disasters (SoD) 1997 revised in 2010 | Ensuring the duties and responsibilities of all entities before, during, and aftermath of a disaster | |||||
The National Water Plan (NWP) 2000 | Providing guidelines to implement water and flood management functionalities at the regional and national level | ||||||
The National Plan for Disaster Management (NPDM) 2010–2015 | Reducing the risk of the vulnerable population from the adverse impacts of unexpected disasters | ||||||
The Disaster Management Act of 2012 | Guiding institutional reformation and ensuring the duties, responsibilities, activities of all stakeholders under obligation | ||||||
The Bangladesh Water Act of 2013 | Providing provisions for the management of water resources and protection from floods using an integrated model | ||||||
The National Plan for Disaster Management 2016–2020 | Sustainable human development through enhancing resilience mechanisms |
Phase | Coalition | Human Beliefs | Priority Sectors | Policy Initiatives | Technical Issues | Key Drivers for Policy Formulations (Endogenous or Exogenous) | Environmental Beliefs | Causes of Policy Failures |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Structural Phase (1947–1987): Large-scale and Small-scale Engineering Scheme | ||||||||
1947s–1970s | Engineering | Structural belief | Massive structural mechanisms for food production | A 25 Year Master Plan | Ignoring flood contexts and ecological factors in designing and planning | Donors-driven interests and mega projects | Engineering solutions were viewed as the main way to control nature | - Technically inconsistent with geographical aspects - Too large projects - Largely ineffective and incompetent - High maintenance cost |
1971s–1987s | Engineering policy coalition between proofers and embankers | Technocratic belief | Low-cost small-scale projects for food not flood | Minor adjustment in flood-control mechanisms | Questioning about the capacity of engineers in managing structural infrastructure | - A devastating famine in 1974 - Political change - Independence - Institutional change | - Ignoring local context and flood dimensions - Protecting nature for flood and crop production | Unsuccessful in food sufficiency |
Structural and Nonstructural Phase (1987–1995): FAP Regime | ||||||||
1989 | Political coalition for structural and non-structural solutions | Return to structural beliefs | Water resource management | Flood Action Plan (FAP) | - Technical viability and economic benefits return - Availability of water during the dry season | - New Technology - Learning of flood control from other countries like the U.S.A, the Netherlands - Global political imperative - Political factors | - Limited understanding of flood context - Overlooked ecological and environmental issues | - The inappropriateness of engineering solutions - Inadequate benefits from agricultural sectors - Negative impacts on livelihoods - The dearth of legitimacy in decision-making |
Post-FAP Phase (1995–Present) | ||||||||
1995s–2000s | Advocacy coalition | Public participation | Water management, not flood Drainage development | - Policy guidelines for participatory management - Focus on smaller projects | - Incomplete information and knowledge - Availability of water during the dry season | - Mainstreaming environmental and local contexts - The policy debate over FAP - Public movement - The growing interest in community-based management | Environmentally viable | - Detrimental effects of embankments and pollution - Lack of good governance - Controlled-command decision processes - Filling water bodies for urban growth and wetlands for rehabilitation-Less emphasis on public opinions |
The 2000s–present | People-centered harmonious coalition | The risk-driven approach, Need-based | Flood risk reduction at the different cycle of flood management | Coherent and cross-cutting policies | Building community resilience | - International policies and accords - Involvement of community-based organizations, NGOs, of media - New technology for early warning and forecasting (Interactive voice response) - Social network - Active participation of community members - Gender inclusiveness | - Ecologically and environmentally friendly structure - Sustainable resource management - Importance of local knowledge | - Empowering local political elites - Patron-client relation at the lower tier of government Indulging interests of local elites - Incomplete information on local and traditional knowledge |
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Haque, C.E.; Azad, M.A.K.; Choudhury, M.-U.-I. Discourse of Flood Management Approaches and Policies in Bangladesh: Mapping the Changes, Drivers, and Actors. Water 2019, 11, 2654. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11122654
Haque CE, Azad MAK, Choudhury M-U-I. Discourse of Flood Management Approaches and Policies in Bangladesh: Mapping the Changes, Drivers, and Actors. Water. 2019; 11(12):2654. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11122654
Chicago/Turabian StyleHaque, C. Emdad, M. Abul Kalam Azad, and Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury. 2019. "Discourse of Flood Management Approaches and Policies in Bangladesh: Mapping the Changes, Drivers, and Actors" Water 11, no. 12: 2654. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11122654