The 2013/14 winter floods and policy change: Interviews and survey data

DOI

The 2013/14 Winter Floods and Policy Change project used qualitative and quantitate methods, namely semi-structured interviews with members of the public and a telephone survey. Both methods investigated perceptions of the causes and solutions to the 2013/14 winter floods and flood risk in the UK more widely. The project investigated public attitudes surrounding the different roles and responsibilities of institutions involved in flood risk management, and how effective local, regional and national policies to tackle flood risk are perceived. Topics also included the health and well-being impacts of the floods and the role of resilience (individual and community) in mitigating the impacts of flooding.This project explores the importance of the early periods following major crises for determining longer-term responses to national policy issues. It does so in order to understand the possibilities at such times for embedding robust, long-term responses to relevant social problems. The research focuses on the major floods which hit the UK during the winter of 2013/14, taking the Somerset Levels and Moors as a case study for examining governance processes and their outcomes in the aftermath of crises. The prolonged nature of these recent floods within Somerset has brought high levels of political, media and wider public attention. There is evidence of conflicting positions and viewpoints on the causes of the floods and the most socially, environmentally and economically appropriate response measures across various stakeholders and flood affected publics. The research will examine this dynamic and evolving context of solution and problem framing in order to build understanding of the immediate aftermath of floods as a key period in which policy change happens and particular solutions emerge. The primary objective will be to show how this initial period of response impacts on the kinds of policy solutions that are put forward and subsequently delivered over the longer term. Our research will be guided by these specific research questions: 1) Do the periods following major national crises offer potential for initiating change in policy and response approaches to floods? 2) What framings are identifiable across the wide range of actors affected by and involved with the 2013/14 floods and how are they linked to specific solutions and outcomes? 3) Which framings dominate or become marginalised over time and with what implications for longer-term responses? 4) How are longer-term issues such as land use, agricultural policy, climate change adaptation and sustainability, incorporated and addressed? The project will use innovative qualitative and quantitative methods to look in-depth at the perspectives and experiences of those that have been directly affected by flooding and those in positions of responsibility for responding and managing floods. Using repeat interviews and a locally representative survey instrument, as well as visual methodologies (i.e. photo-elicitation), the project will generate a rich data set that will be used to interrogate the important questions about governance in periods after crises that the research addresses. The lessons learned from this case study will inform the processes of policy-making as they unfold and contribute to the development of robust, long-term responses to floods that are attuned to the values, perspectives and world views of the different social actors affected.

The interviews were conducted during the August/September of 2014 (n=35) and the repeated during April of 2015 (n=25), and lasted approximately 1 -1.5 hours The participants were members of the public from across the Somerset Levels and Moors, UK who had experienced different levels of impact from the 2013/14 floods. The survey was carried out in June 2015 and respondents were from Somerset (n= 500) and Boston, Lincolnshire (=500). Many of the survey questions were based on the finding from the interviews and the survey was designed to investigate how salient the themes for the qualitative work were across a larger population, and across a region who experienced different type of flooding in 2013.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852262
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=70fb5be1b9fa04afa98d45ec116d52e371849b020482e1406aa3409a71ad5d0b
Provenance
Creator Butler, C, University of Exeter; Evans, L, University of Exeter; Adger , N, University of Exeter; O'Neill, S, University of Exeter
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2016
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council
Rights Catherine Butler, University of Exeter; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Somerset and Boston Lincolnshire; United Kingdom