Flood Policy and Governance: A Pathway for Policy Coherence in Nigeria
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. How Climate Change Exacerbate Flood in Nigeria?
2.1. What Are the Most Common Causes of Flood in Nigeria?
2.2. What Are the Common Impacts of Flood in Nigeria?
2.3. An Overview of Flood Risk, Exposure and Vulnerability in Nigeria
3. Nigeria’s Planning System
3.1. Environment Policies, Strategies and Plans
3.2. Policy for Disaster Management in Nigeria
3.3. Climate Change Policy in Nigeria
4. The Building Blocks for Enhancing Flood Policy Coherence
4.1. Political Commitments in Flood Planning, Control and Management in Nigeria
4.2. Flood Policy Integration in Nigeria
4.3. Long-Term Planning Horizons
4.4. Policy Effect
4.5. Subnational/State and Local Involvement
4.6. Stakeholder Engagement—Pre and Post Flood
4.7. Monitoring and Reporting
5. Flood Governance, Institutional Structure and Responsibilities
5.1. The Role of Federal Government in Flood Governance, Risk Reduction
5.2. The Role of State Governments in Flood Governance, Risk Reduction
5.3. The Role of Local Governments in Flood Governance, Risk Reduction
5.4. Civil Society Organization Engagement Can Strengthen Flood Governance, and Risk Reduction
5.5. Organized Private Sector Engagement Can Strengthen Flood Governance
5.6. Citizen Engagement in Flood Governance
6. Policy Synergy: Linking Policies for Coherence
6.1. Institutional Synergy: Linking Institutions for Coherence
6.2. Effectiveness of Flood Governance
6.3. The Strengths and Weaknesses of Institutions and Programs/Policies
6.4. The Need to Improve Flood Governance
6.5. The need for Institutional and Policy Coherence in Flood Governance
7. Policy Recommendations, Research Gaps and Research Needs
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author and Year | Title of the Article | Research Objective | Significant Findings |
---|---|---|---|
[14] | Impacts of flood disasters in Nigeria: A critical evaluation of health implications and management | “To reviews flood disasters in Nigeria and how they have been managed over the past two decades” | This study found that flood-related health indicators are poorly managed and that flood response and planning are not well coordinated. |
[15] | The impact of flooding on Nigeria’s sustainable development goals (SDGs) | “To highlights the impact flooding has on Nigeria reaching SDGs and enumerates the specific SDGs most directly impacted” | The findings revealed that unregulated urbanization, poor planning laws, corruption, and a poor waste management system are the major causes of flooding in Nigeria. |
[42] | Recent retreat and flood dominant areas along the muddy Mahin coastline of Ilaje, Nigeria | “To understand the present evolution of the coastal area in order to manage the environmental and human risks in the future”. | In recent years, the retreat has dominated areas that were once accreting. It is interesting to note that some areas are gaining more land compared to those that have receded. |
[43] | Indigenous flood control and management knowledge and flood disaster risk reduction in Nigeria’s coastal communities: An empirical analysis | “To examines indigenous flood control and management knowledge with the intent to identify its effectiveness in risk reduction of flood disasters in Nigeria’s coastal communities” | The finding shows that indigenous flood control and management practices account for 61.2% of flood risk reduction strategies in coastal communities in Nigeria. |
[44] | Examination of international law and flood management | “To evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of legal and institutional framework on flood related disasters in Nigeria” | The findings revealed that effective disaster risk management at the national, regional, and global levels depends on disaster risk governance. |
[45] | Assessment of flood vulnerability in some communities in Lokoja, Kogi State, Nigeria, using Participatory Geographic Information Systems | “To conduct a vulnerability assessment in Lokoja as a pre-flood strategy that involves the communities” | The results revealed that there is a strong correlation between flood vulnerability and elevation, as well as land use, among other parameters |
[46] | Impacts of Flood on Food Crop Production and the Adaptive Measures Among Farmers in the Northern Guinea Savannah of Agro ecological Zone of Kaduna State, Nigeria | “To analysis the impact of flood on food crop production and the adaptive measures among farmers in northern guinea savannah of agro ecological zone of Kaduna State” | The findings revealed that flood has multidimensional impact on crop production. The impact is viewed differently by farmers. |
[47] | Flooding Conceptual Review: Sustainability-Focalized Best Practices in Nigeria | “To utilize a conceptual framework to assess and identify areas within Nigeria prone to flooding and examine possible means of alleviating damage and harm” | The results of this study indicate that several factors contribute to the frequency of flooding, including different precipitation patterns, urbanization, and increased paved surfaces. |
[48] | A gender perspective on the impact of flood on the food security of households in rural communities of Anambra state, Nigeria | “To examined gender perspectives of the implications of the severe 2012 flood on household food security in rural Anambra state, Nigeria” | The findings revealed that households in Nigeria may be able to remain food secure after future floods by diversifying their income away from agriculture, building early warning systems, and improving women’s education. |
[49] | Geospatial Techniques for the Assessment and Analysis of Flood Risk along the Niger-Benue Basin in Nigeria | “To assess the spatial impact of the October 2012 flooding of the Niger-Benue basin on the surrounding areas” | The findings of this study indicate that flooding along the Niger-Benue basin can be mitigated and monitored using geospatial methods |
Sector | Strategy | Expected Outcome |
---|---|---|
All form of disaster | National Disaster Response Plan (NDRP) | Major disasters and emergencies are addressed effectively, efficiently, and in a systematic manner |
All form of disasters including flood | National Disaster Management Framework (NDMF) | Preparation, prevention, mitigation, response, and recovery from disasters should be ensured at all government levels. |
Flood | National Flood Preparedness Plan (NFPP) | State participation in disaster relief, including coordination of humanitarian actors and resources |
Environment, soil and flood | National Environmental (soil erosion and flood control) Regulations, 2011 | Prevent floods and erosion, protect human life and the environment. |
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Danhassan, S.S.; Abubakar, A.; Zangina, A.S.; Ahmad, M.H.; Hazaea, S.A.; Ishak, M.Y.; Zhang, J. Flood Policy and Governance: A Pathway for Policy Coherence in Nigeria. Sustainability 2023, 15, 2392. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032392
Danhassan SS, Abubakar A, Zangina AS, Ahmad MH, Hazaea SA, Ishak MY, Zhang J. Flood Policy and Governance: A Pathway for Policy Coherence in Nigeria. Sustainability. 2023; 15(3):2392. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032392
Chicago/Turabian StyleDanhassan, Samir Shehu, Ahmed Abubakar, Aminu Sulaiman Zangina, Mohammad Hadi Ahmad, Saddam A. Hazaea, Mohd Yusoff Ishak, and Jiahua Zhang. 2023. "Flood Policy and Governance: A Pathway for Policy Coherence in Nigeria" Sustainability 15, no. 3: 2392. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032392
APA StyleDanhassan, S. S., Abubakar, A., Zangina, A. S., Ahmad, M. H., Hazaea, S. A., Ishak, M. Y., & Zhang, J. (2023). Flood Policy and Governance: A Pathway for Policy Coherence in Nigeria. Sustainability, 15(3), 2392. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032392