The practice of integrated coastal management (ICM) has matured sufficiently since its beginnings in the early 1980s to suggest a set of principles that could be used to guide the massive investments that will be made over the next several years to rehabilitate and reconstruct the thousands of kilometers of coastlines devastated by the 26 December 2004 tsunami. We offer six principles to guide what can be done to make coastal communities less vulnerable, to improve the conditions of the poor, and to avoid repeating the mistaken judgements that have been made in the past about how shorelines are allocated and developed. We then offer a set of five principles to guide how action plans are formulated and implemented. These stress the critical importance of tailoring principles to the unique conditions and needs of each place. The roles of national government in setting policies to guide a decentralized planning and decision-making process are distinguished from a negotiation process that engages the people of the place in a bottom-up application of ICM good practices.
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1 December 2005
Rebuilding after the Tsunami: Getting It Right
Stephen Bloye Olsen,
William Matuszeski,
Tiruponithura V. Padma,
H. J M. Wickremeratne
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AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment
Vol. 34 • No. 8
December 2005
Vol. 34 • No. 8
December 2005