Waddell, J.Ziervogel, G.2015-04-072015-04-072014http://hdl.handle.net/10625/53877Meeting: 5th Global Forum on Urban Resilience & Adaptation, Bonn, Germany, 29-31 May 2014This conference paper suggests that unclear roles and responsibilities, lack of monitoring mechanisms, unclear definitions of flooding, and lack of human resources are significant barriers to collaborative flood governance in Cape Town. It draws on qualitative data collected in Cape Town as part of a broader research project to understand how floods are managed in the city’s high flood-risk informal settlements. Although cooperation to prevent disaster is the ideal– in practice it is difficult to achieve between multiple actors with diverse interests and capacities. This research formed part of the broader Flooding in Cape Town under Climate Risk (FliCCR) project.application/pdfenDISASTER PREVENTIONINFORMAL SETTLEMENTSGOVERNANCEFLOODSDECISION MAKINGSOUTH AFRICACLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATIONCIVIL SOCIETYCOMMUNITY POWERLOCAL GOVERNMENTCAPE TOWNSOUTH OF SAHARARESILIENCEMulti-actor flood governance in Cape Town's informal settlements unpacking the barriers to collaborative governanceProceedings of the Resilient Cities 2014 congress / session F2 - filling data gaps to address flooding in coastal citiesConference Report