Orals

HS5.2.2

The research field of socio-hydrology emerged recently as an attempt to better understand the dynamic interactions and feedbacks within diverse coupled human-water systems and its implications for the assessment and management of water resources and associated risks. While acknowledging that the human impact on natural processes has reached unprecedented levels, the socio-hydrological perspective provides for a comprehensive understanding of integrated water systems and aims to identify adequate solutions for water supply, management, and adaptation to risk.
Socio-hydrology offers novel entry points for a more fertile engagement between hydrological and social sciences across different scales ranging from the plot level to entire watersheds. Its interdisciplinary nature encompasses (and integrates) various methodological approaches and epistemologies: from the air (remote sensing), on the ground (empirical field studies) and in the laboratory (modelling) and from positivist thinking common in natural and engineering sciences and constructivist thinking common in social sciences and behavioural economics.

The session therefore aims to trigger a discourse on understanding such systems at a diversity of scales with mutual recognition of different epistemologies within natural and social sciences. Examples of feedbacks include, but not limited to, economic forces such as agricultural or industrial production, diffusion or adoption of technology and knowledge such as water harvesting, community awareness such as emergence of environmental movements, values and norms etc. We welcome contributions from researchers from social and natural sciences who are keen to look beyond their research perspective and who like to discuss their research findings in a broader context of coupled human water systems, i.e. the subject matter of socio-hydrology.

Abstracts are solicited on topics that deal with planetary water boundary concepts, integrated assessment models (IAMs), water history and archaeology, sustainability of engineered river basins, water valuation (both monetary and non-monetary), urbanizing deltas etc. with a focus on understanding feedbacks and the spatial and temporal dynamics between human society (from individuals to global levels) and their environment and/or simulating plausible co-evolutionary dynamics that emerges into the future. Resulting policy insights for a sustainable future are equally welcomed. Coupled systems can be human-flood systems, human-infrastructure systems, human-irrigation systems, human-agricultural systems, human-delta systems etc. Papers of theoretical, conceptual or applied nature are solicited that 1) contribute to the understanding of complex human-water relations and their management, 2) discuss the benefits and shortcomings based on empirical, conceptual or model-based research and disciplinary perspective; and 3) shed light on the added value of socio-hydrological modelling for risk-based decision making and adaptation design.

This session is jointly developed with the framework of the Panta Rhei Research Initiative of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) under the working group of “Socio-hydrological modeling and synthesis”.

Public information:
This session proudly hosts the HS Division Outstanding Early Career Scientists Award presentation by Serena Ceola. She was awarded for her outstanding contributions to the understanding of the interplay of river dynamics, fluvial ecology and human activities.

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Convener: Britta Höllermann | Co-conveners: Giuliano Di Baldassarre, Marcus Nüsser, Saket Pande, Murugesu Sivapalan, Ted Veldkamp, Jeroen Aerts, Marleen de Ruiter
Orals
| Wed, 10 Apr, 14:00–18:00
 
Room B
Posters
| Attendance Wed, 10 Apr, 10:45–12:30
 
Hall A

Wednesday, 10 April 2019 | Room B

Chairperson: Britta Höllermann and Ted Veldkamp
HS Division Outstanding ECS Award
14:00–14:30 |
EGU2019-6673
| Highlight
Serena Ceola
Collaborative and practice oriented research
14:30–14:45 |
EGU2019-13287
Branka Bracic Zeleznik, Barbara Cencur Curk, Anja Torkar, Urska Valencic, and Andrej Luksic
14:45–15:00 |
EGU2019-7400
Christian Huggel, Fabian Drenkhan, Natalia Aste, Christian D León, Alina Motschmann, Randy Muñoz, Jochen Seidel, and Claudia Teutsch
15:00–15:15 |
EGU2019-8827
| Highlight
Wim Douven, Chris Seijger, Leon Hermans, Gerardo van Halsema, Dorien Korbee, Fida Khan, and Quan Nguyen
15:30–15:45 |
EGU2019-10504
Aude Vincent, Alain Dupuy, Denis Salles, and Charles de Godoy Leski
Coffee break
Chairperson: Saket Pande and Marleen de Ruiter
Floods
16:15–16:30 |
EGU2019-12204
Maya Lyn Manocsoc, Marlies Barendrecht, Miriam Bertola, Alessio Ciullo, Lydia Cumiskey, Alex Curran, Ricardo Tavares da Costa, Dirk Diederen, Mostafa Farrag, Friederike Holz, Sonu Khanal, A. Duha Metin, Nivedita Sairam, Iuliia Shustikova, Jeison Sosa, and Kai Schröter
16:30–16:45 |
EGU2019-5048
Marlies H Barendrecht, Alberto Viglione, Simon McCarthy, and Günter Blöschl
Water demand
16:45–17:00 |
EGU2019-10997
Mohammad Ghoreishi, Saman Razavi, and Amin Elshorbagy
17:00–17:15 |
EGU2019-17163
Elisabeth Krueger, Dietrich Borchardt, and P Suresh C Rao
17:15–17:30 |
EGU2019-9229
Maurizio Mazzoleni and Giuliano Di Baldassarre
17:30–18:00