| نویسندگان | Mohsen Pourreza-Bilondi |
| همایش | بیست و چهارمین کنفرانس ملی هیدرولیک ایران |
| تاریخ برگزاری همایش | 2025-10-29 |
| محل برگزاری همایش | بیرجند |
| شماره صفحات | 0-0 |
| نوع ارائه | پوستر |
| سطح همایش | داخلی |
| کلید واژه ها | System Dynamics, Levee, Reservoir Dam, Risk Awareness, Flood and Drought Memory. |
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چکیده مقاله
Managing water extremes is no longer only a question of engineering design but understanding the multi-hazard
risks produced when infrastructures, water policies, and downstream society interact. Dams and levees reduce
immediate flood impacts, yet they also reshape human–water relations in ways that can generate new behaviors,
risks, and compound vulnerabilities. This study develops a socio-hydrological perspective on multi-hazard risks
arising from flood management infrastructure and operational decision-making, with the Dez Dam in southwest
Iran as a critical case. A stylized socio-hydrological framework is introduced to capture how the construction of
dams and levees gradually faded flood risk awareness. Findings show that declining flood frequency eroded
preparedness and encouraged intensive floodplain development. Furthermore, successive droughts heightened
“drought memory,” driving managers to store water above the Flood Control Rule Curve. When the 2016 extreme
flood struck, emergency releases overwhelmed downstream levees, magnifying damages. The study identifies
multi-hazard risks rooted in infrastructure construction and socio-water policies dynamics, and calls for future
research on probabilistic assessment and dynamic modeling to guide adaptive governance.
لینک ثابت مقاله