About this Research Topic
To tackle the challenges of natural hazards and risks associated with changing conditions in high-mountain regions, we invite studies that employ the latest conceptual and methodological approaches to enhance our understanding of (i) the physical causes, mechanisms, and Spatio-temporal patterns of hazards, and (ii) the societal and economic components and drivers of risks. Given the breadth and complexity of the Research Topic, we are particularly looking for interdisciplinary approaches, combining natural and social sciences. Accentuating the implications for natural hazard science and disaster risk reduction is essential for this collection.
We welcome all relevant contributions addressing diverse aspects of natural hazards and risks in mountain regions across the world. The scope of the Research Topic comprises both the evaluation and analysis of specific cases from small to large scales. This includes, but is not strictly limited to: landslides, lake outbursts, glacier- and permafrost-related hazards and risks, extreme sediment yield, earthquakes, volcanic activity, and interactions between them. We seek Original Research Papers, Methodological Papers, and state-of-the-art Reviews. We welcome conceptual studies that help to inform climate change mitigation and adaptation, including methodological aspects of hazard and risk assessments. We especially encourage interdisciplinary contributions dealing with more than one component of risk, and global-scale studies, or studies with broader and transferable implications.
We would like to acknowledge Dr. Jennifer Sherry has acted as coordinator and has contributed to the preparation of the proposal for this Research Topic.
Keywords: High mountains, hazard assessment, disaster risk reduction, climate change impacts, glacier hazards
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.