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Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
Part 1: Concept and synthesis
Chapter 2: Concept and application of hybrid infrastructure
Chapter 3: An Economic Analysis of Optimal Hybrid Infrastructure: A Theoretical Approach in a Hydro-Economic Model
Chapter 4: Flood Management Policy in Shiga Prefecture, Japan: Implementation Approach of a Risk-Based Flood Management System at Catchment Scale
Chapter 5: Toward social infrastructure: typological idea for evaluating implementation potential of green infrastructure
Part 2 : Forest ecosystem
Chapter 6: Riparian Forests and Climate Change: Interactive Zone of Green and Blue Infrastructure
Chapter 7: Improvement of the flood-reduction function of forests based on their interception evaporation and surface storage capacities
Chapter 8: Forests for water: A step-by-step guide for payment schemes
Part 3: River and floodplain ecosystem (including paddy field and other farmlands)
Chapter 9: Wetland Paddy Fields as Green Infrastructure against Flood
Chapter 10: Change in Floodwater Retention Function of a Paddy Field due to Cultivation Abandonment in a Depopulating Rural Region in Japan
Chapter 11: Paddy field as a green inflastructure: their ecosystem services and threatening drivers
Part 4: Wetland ecosystem (including flood-control pond)
Chapter 12: Flood-control basins as green infrastructures: flood-risk reduction, biodiversity conservation and sustainable management in Japan
Chapter 13: Natural Succession of Wetland Vegetation in a Flood-control Pond Constructed on Abandoned Farmland
Chapter 14: Biodiversity Conservation through Various Citizen Activities in a Flood Control Basin
Part 5: Urban and city ecosystem
Chapter 15: Toward holistic Urban Green Infrastructure Implementation
Chapter 16: Changes in the Use of Green Spaces by Citizens before and during the First COVID-19 Pandemic: A Big data analysis using mobile-tracking GPS data in Kanazawa, Japan
Chapter 17: Land Use Planning as a Green Infrastructure in a Rural Japanese Depopulated Town
Chapter 16: Towards an Equitable Distribution of Urban Green Spaces for People and Landscapes; An opportunity for Portland's Green Grid
Part 6: Coast and estuary ecosystem
Chapter 19: "Effectiveness and Sustainability of Coastal Hybrid Infrastructures for Low-Frequency Large-Scale Disasters
A Case Study of Coastal Disaster Assessment for a Complex Disaster"
Chapter 20: Challenging a Hybrid between Green and Gray Infrastructure – Coastal Sand-covered Embankments
Chapter 21: Green Infrastructures in Megacity Jakarta: Current Status and Possibilities of Mangroves for Flood Damage Mitigation
Chapter 22: Implementation of Japanese Blue Carbon Offset Crediting Projects
Part 7: Economic evaluation
Chapter 23: Understanding Preference Differences among Individuals for the Reduction in Flood Risk by Green Infrastructure
Chapter 24: Assessing Public Preference for Construction of Giant Seawalls Using the Best–Worst Scaling Approach
Chapter 25: "Coastal communities’ preferences of grey, green and hybrid infrastructure against unexpected catastrophes: A case study of Japan"
Chapter 26: Carbon storage and substitution benefits of harvested wood products
Part 8: Governance
Chapter 27: Social System in Collaborative Activities for Conserving Coastal Pine Forest in Karatsu City, Kyusyu, Japan
Chapter 28: Governance for realizing multifunctional floodplain; flood control, agriculture, and biodiversity in Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, California, USA
Chapter 29: Analysis of the description of the multifunctionality of farmland in the administrative plans of local municipalities.
Part 1: Concept and synthesis
Chapter 2: Concept and application of hybrid infrastructure
Chapter 3: An Economic Analysis of Optimal Hybrid Infrastructure: A Theoretical Approach in a Hydro-Economic Model
Chapter 4: Flood Management Policy in Shiga Prefecture, Japan: Implementation Approach of a Risk-Based Flood Management System at Catchment Scale
Chapter 5: Toward social infrastructure: typological idea for evaluating implementation potential of green infrastructure
Part 2 : Forest ecosystem
Chapter 6: Riparian Forests and Climate Change: Interactive Zone of Green and Blue Infrastructure
Chapter 7: Improvement of the flood-reduction function of forests based on their interception evaporation and surface storage capacities
Chapter 8: Forests for water: A step-by-step guide for payment schemes
Part 3: River and floodplain ecosystem (including paddy field and other farmlands)
Chapter 9: Wetland Paddy Fields as Green Infrastructure against Flood
Chapter 10: Change in Floodwater Retention Function of a Paddy Field due to Cultivation Abandonment in a Depopulating Rural Region in Japan
Chapter 11: Paddy field as a green inflastructure: their ecosystem services and threatening drivers
Part 4: Wetland ecosystem (including flood-control pond)
Chapter 12: Flood-control basins as green infrastructures: flood-risk reduction, biodiversity conservation and sustainable management in Japan
Chapter 13: Natural Succession of Wetland Vegetation in a Flood-control Pond Constructed on Abandoned Farmland
Chapter 14: Biodiversity Conservation through Various Citizen Activities in a Flood Control Basin
Part 5: Urban and city ecosystem
Chapter 15: Toward holistic Urban Green Infrastructure Implementation
Chapter 16: Changes in the Use of Green Spaces by Citizens before and during the First COVID-19 Pandemic: A Big data analysis using mobile-tracking GPS data in Kanazawa, Japan
Chapter 17: Land Use Planning as a Green Infrastructure in a Rural Japanese Depopulated Town
Chapter 16: Towards an Equitable Distribution of Urban Green Spaces for People and Landscapes; An opportunity for Portland's Green Grid
Part 6: Coast and estuary ecosystem
Chapter 19: "Effectiveness and Sustainability of Coastal Hybrid Infrastructures for Low-Frequency Large-Scale Disasters
A Case Study of Coastal Disaster Assessment for a Complex Disaster"
Chapter 20: Challenging a Hybrid between Green and Gray Infrastructure – Coastal Sand-covered Embankments
Chapter 21: Green Infrastructures in Megacity Jakarta: Current Status and Possibilities of Mangroves for Flood Damage Mitigation
Chapter 22: Implementation of Japanese Blue Carbon Offset Crediting Projects
Part 7: Economic evaluation
Chapter 23: Understanding Preference Differences among Individuals for the Reduction in Flood Risk by Green Infrastructure
Chapter 24: Assessing Public Preference for Construction of Giant Seawalls Using the Best–Worst Scaling Approach
Chapter 25: "Coastal communities’ preferences of grey, green and hybrid infrastructure against unexpected catastrophes: A case study of Japan"
Chapter 26: Carbon storage and substitution benefits of harvested wood products
Part 8: Governance
Chapter 27: Social System in Collaborative Activities for Conserving Coastal Pine Forest in Karatsu City, Kyusyu, Japan
Chapter 28: Governance for realizing multifunctional floodplain; flood control, agriculture, and biodiversity in Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, California, USA
Chapter 29: Analysis of the description of the multifunctionality of farmland in the administrative plans of local municipalities.