TY - JOUR
T1 - Pan‐European landslide risk assessment
T2 - From theory to practice
AU - Caleca, Francesco
AU - Lombardo, L.
AU - Steger, Stefan
AU - Tanyas, Hakan
AU - Raspini, Federico
AU - Dahal, A.
AU - Nefros, Constantinos
AU - Mărgărint, Mihai Ciprian
AU - Drouin, Vincent
AU - Jemec‐Auflič, Mateja
AU - Novellino, Alessandro
AU - Tonini, Marj
AU - Loche, Marco
AU - Casagli, Nicola
AU - Tofani, Veronica
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Assessing landslide risk is a fundamental requirement to plan suitable prevention actions. To date, most risk studies focus on individual slopes or catchments. Whereas regional, national or continental scale assessments are hardly available because of methodological and/or data limitations. In this contribution, we present an overview of all requirements and limitations in landslide risk studies across all spatial scales, by means of a hybrid form that combines elements of original research with the comprehensive characteristics of a review study. The review critically analyses each component in the landslide risk analysis providing a detailed explanation of their state-of-the-art, with dedicated sections on susceptibility, hazard, exposure, and vulnerability. To put the theoretical framework to test, we also dive into a case study, expressed at the continental scale. Specifically, we take the main European mountain ranges and provide the reader with a textbook example of risk assessment for such a large territory. In doing so, we take into account issues associated with cross-national differences in landslide mapping. As a result, we identify landslide-prone European landscape and explore the associated possible economic consequences (human settlements and agricultural areas). We also analyze the population at risk during daytime and nighttime. Moreover, a modern view of the problem is explored in the form of how risk outcomes should be delivered to master planners and geoscientific personnel alike. Specifically, we convert our output into an interactive Web Application (https://pan-european-landslide-risk.github.io/) to include notions of scientific communication both to a large public as well as to a technical audience.
AB - Assessing landslide risk is a fundamental requirement to plan suitable prevention actions. To date, most risk studies focus on individual slopes or catchments. Whereas regional, national or continental scale assessments are hardly available because of methodological and/or data limitations. In this contribution, we present an overview of all requirements and limitations in landslide risk studies across all spatial scales, by means of a hybrid form that combines elements of original research with the comprehensive characteristics of a review study. The review critically analyses each component in the landslide risk analysis providing a detailed explanation of their state-of-the-art, with dedicated sections on susceptibility, hazard, exposure, and vulnerability. To put the theoretical framework to test, we also dive into a case study, expressed at the continental scale. Specifically, we take the main European mountain ranges and provide the reader with a textbook example of risk assessment for such a large territory. In doing so, we take into account issues associated with cross-national differences in landslide mapping. As a result, we identify landslide-prone European landscape and explore the associated possible economic consequences (human settlements and agricultural areas). We also analyze the population at risk during daytime and nighttime. Moreover, a modern view of the problem is explored in the form of how risk outcomes should be delivered to master planners and geoscientific personnel alike. Specifically, we convert our output into an interactive Web Application (https://pan-european-landslide-risk.github.io/) to include notions of scientific communication both to a large public as well as to a technical audience.
KW - ITC-HYBRID
KW - ITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLE
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85218343032&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2023RG000825
DO - 10.1029/2023RG000825
M3 - Review article
SN - 8755-1209
VL - 63
JO - Reviews of geophysics
JF - Reviews of geophysics
IS - 1
M1 - e2023RG000825
ER -