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    • River bank erosion is a natural disaster

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      • River bank erosion is a natural disaster and takes place round the year. River bank erosion is an endemic and recurrent natural hazard, which create enormous amount of land loss, population displacement and landlessness,,.
      www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061719300559
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  2. Jan 1, 2024 · Among the numerous types of natural disasters, riverbank erosion has permanent land losses scarcely to replace with extremely devastating long-term economic consequences (Das et al., 2014). It profoundly influences the lives and properties of riverside residents (Mili et al., 2013).

    • Resilience to Natural Hazards and Disasters
    • Resilience Thinking
    • Community Resilience

    The concept of resilience has been widely used in ecological research across a variety of disciplines. According to the Macmillan Dictionary resilience means ‘the act of rebounding’, in other words, to bounce back. The resilience concept was first used in the 1620s and originally derived from the Latin word ‘resiliens’. From the early 1970s, the co...

    The concept of resilience thinking originally goes back to the study of systems ecology (Holling 1973). However, the specific initiative of resilience thinking for disasters started in the late 1990s, through the establishment of the Resilience Analysis Research Center in Stockholm, Sweden. Later on, the concept of resilience thinking has been used...

    Community resilience refers to the capacities and overall structures of a community that enables the community to respond after a disturbance and adapt to change and uncertainty (Cutter et al. 2008; Norris et al. 2008; Tidball and Krasny 2007; Tobin 1999). More specifically, community resilience defines the shared ability of a population within a g...

    • Munshi Khaledur Rahman, Thomas W. Crawford, Bimal Kanti Paul, Md. Sariful Islam, Scott Curtis, Md. G...
    • 2021
  3. Feb 6, 2024 · Dimensions of riverbank erosion are manifested through (1) natural dimensions and (2) socioeconomic dimensions. Riverbank erosion is popularly regarded as a natural process because whenever there is lateral erosion of a river, bank erosion is inevitable.

  4. Jan 1, 2021 · Riverbank erosion has gained attention as one of the most important issues to be addressed by fluvial geomorphologists, hydrologists, riparian land managers, river scientists, planners as well...

  5. Aug 1, 2020 · The first section details the global issues of bank erosion and pinpoints concerns specific to northern environments. The second section describes the dominant erosion processes (fluvial vs. terrestrial), mechanisms (mechanical vs. thermal) and typical landforms encountered in the literature.

    • Léo Chassiot, Patrick Lajeunesse, Jean-François Bernier
    • 2020
  6. Feb 6, 2024 · River bank erosion is a fundamental fluvial action existent in any fluvial system to support the sediment supply and ecological functionality.

  7. Jun 1, 2008 · Bank erosion is a natural geomorphic process or disturbance that occurs during or soon after floods. Riverbanks are transitional boundaries, or ecotones, between the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, and they frequently change under naturally dynamic hydrologic conditions.

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