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From the homepage, property owners and buyers can follow the guided questions to find appropriate flood risk reduction strategies specific to their needs. The questions are used to determine property type, foundation type, the flood hazard zone the property is located within, and history of flood risk. At the end of the quiz, you will be taken to a mitigation strategies page where selected strategies have been filtered for you based on your responses to the quiz. You can further filter and search for mitigation strategies by maintenance requirements, severity of flood risk, relative cost, and level of effort. The mitigation strategies are shown as tiles on the screen. To learn more about each strategy, click here to read on the tile to see additional information. You can also compare different strategies. To do so, select the strategies you want to compare by checking the “compare” box in their respective tiles. Then, select “compare selections.” This option will show you how the strategies compare in scale, annual maintenance, relative cost, and level of effort.
It stores deleted emails older than 55 days based on your organization’s data-retention rules. This only works if the organization already uses Google Vault. Keep in mind that deleted emails older than 55 days cannot be restored directly to your Gmail account. If you deleted an email in Outlook more than 30 days ago, you can try retrieving it through the Recoverable Items folder. 1. Open your Outlook account. 2. Click on the “Deleted Items” folder on the navigation menu bar on the left. 4. Select the deleted email you’d like to retrieve. If this doesn’t work, you can reach out to Outlook’s support team. 1. Open your Outlook account. 2. Go to the Outlook Help panel on the right side of the page. 4. If the self-help search results don’t solve the issue, scroll down to “Still need help? Select either the “Provide your email address and a support agent will contact you” or “Chat with a support agent in your web browser” option for help retrieving permanently deleted emails.
The CPI scores and ranks countries/territories based on how corrupt a country’s public sector is perceived to be by experts and business executives. It is a composite index comprised through 13 data sources and is the most widely used indicator of corruption worldwide. The HDI is a summary measure of three key dimensions of human development: health, education, and standard of living82, and is comprised of normalised indices of: life expectancy, expected years of schooling, mean years of school and Gross National Income (GNI) per capita. Both the CPI and HDI have been successfully used in previous natural hazard risk assessments51,83. While both the CPI and HDI provide a useful metric for assessing the development of a country/territory83, they do not reflect on many factors that influence social vulnerability75. Thus, to assess the coping capacity of downstream communities and the ability of the affected nation to effectively respond to the event, a SVI was also calculated.
6, Utrecht, The Netherlands. Olfert A. and Schanze J. (2005) Identification and ex-post evaluation of existing pre-flood measures and instruments - A theoretical framework. FLOODsite Report No. T12-05- 01, Leibniz Institute of Ecological and Regional Development (IOER), Dresden. Oumeraci H. (2004) Sustainable coastal flood defences: Scientific and modelling challenges towards an integrated risk-based design concept. Parker D.J. (2000) Managing Flood Hazards and Disasters: International Lessons, Directions and Future Challenges. Parker D. J. (ed.) Floods. Parker D.J. and Fordham M. (1996) An evaluation of flood forecasting, warning and response systems in the European Union. Penning-Rowsell E. and Peerbolte B. (1994) Concepts, Policies and Research. Penning- Rowsell E. and Fordham M. (eds.) Floods across Europe. Flood Hazard Assessment, Modelling and Management. Penning-Roswell E., Tunstall S.M., Tapsell S.M. Parker D. (2000) The Benefits of Flood Warnings: Real but Elusive and Politically Significant Water and Environmental Management. Penning-Rowsell E., Johnson C., Tunstall S., Tapsell S.M., Morris J., Chatterton J., Coker A. and Green C. (2003) The Benefits of flood and coastal defence: techniques and data for 2003. Flood Hazard Research Centre, Middlesex University.
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