@article{Thieken2017, author = {Thieken, Annegret}, title = {Contributions of flood insurance toeEnhance resilience-findings from Germany}, series = {Urban Disaster Resilience and Security}, journal = {Urban Disaster Resilience and Security}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-319-68606-6}, issn = {2365-757X}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-68606-6_9}, pages = {129 -- 144}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In 2002, a severe flood caused financial losses of EUR 11.6 billion in Germany and triggered many changes in flood risk management. This chapter focuses on flood insurance, which is a voluntary supplementary insurance in Germany: it is explored how flood insurance has contributed to enhance resilience of flood-prone residents. The analyses are based on empirical data collected by post-event surveys in the federal states of Saxony and Bavaria and refer to the three pillars upon which the concept of flood resilience usually builds in the natural hazards context: recovery, adaptive capacity and resistance. Overall, the penetration of flood insurance has increased since 2002 and there is strong empirical evidence that losses of insured residents are more often and better compensated than those of uninsured despite the provision of governmental financial disaster assistance after big floods. This facilitation of recovery is, however, not the only contribution to flood resilience. Insured residents tend to invest more in further flood mitigation measures at their properties than uninsured. Obviously, flood insurance is embedded in a complex safety strategy of property owners that needs more investigation in order to be addressed more effectively in risk communication and integrated risk management strategies.}, language = {en} }