Dr Liz Holcombe
M.Sci, Ph.D.(Bristol), FHEA
Current positions
Senior Lecturer
School of Civil, Aerospace and Design Engineering
Contact
Press and media
Many of our academics speak to the media as experts in their field of research. If you are a journalist, please contact the University’s Media and PR Team:
Research interests
Liz Holcombe's background is in dynamic slope hydrology and stability modelling with a particular focus on urban landslide risk management in the Humid Tropics. The core areas of Liz's research are the development and application of:
- slope stability and landslide cost models
- methods for assessing landslide risk to road networks
- community-based drainage measures for reducing urban landslide hazards in developing countries
Liz’s wider research interests within the field of disaster risk management include decision-making in uncertain environments, ‘building back better’ for resilience and sustainability, and community-based approaches.
The main application of Liz’s research has been the development of an innovative methodology for assessing and reducing landslide risk in unplanned urban communities. MoSSaiC (Management of Slope Stability in Communities) is based on identifying the localized physical causes of landslides (often related to inadequate drainage), designing appropriate engineering measures to address these causes (such as surface water drains), and constructing those measures to an adequate specification so that the root cause of the hazard is effectively addressed. This science- and engineering-based approach is embedded in community participation and the engagement of local government experts, policy-makers and development agencies. It has been successfully applied in 12 communities in the Eastern Caribbean with funding from Governments, UNDP, USAID and The World Bank.
Liz’s work is recognised within academia and in the field of international development. In 2007 she was awarded the Institution of Civil Engineers Trevithick Prize for a co-authored paper on the MoSSaiC methodology. For a full publication list see here. From 2011 to 2017 she was engaged by The World Bank as Consultant Landslide Risk Management Specialist. Liz has co-authored a book entitled 'Community-Based Landslide Risk Reduction which was published by The World Bank in 2013.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Tomorrow's Cities Phase 3 Funding
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Civil, Aerospace and Design EngineeringDates
01/04/2023 to 31/03/2024
Tomorrow's Cities - phase 2 social science
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Civil EngineeringDates
01/04/2022 to 31/03/2023
Tomorrow's Cities - phase 2 social science
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Civil, Aerospace and Design EngineeringDates
01/04/2022 to 31/03/2023
8035 MURTH - CIVE PDRA costs not to be claimed back
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Civil EngineeringDates
15/11/2021 to 31/01/2022
Thesis supervisions
Quantifying the influence of informal housing on rainfall-triggered landslides in the humid tropics
Supervisors
Geotechnical data curation and a geostatistical multivariate framework for Vs prediction in data scarce contexts
Supervisors
Integrated modelling of slope hydrology and stability hazards to explore the potential effects of land use and climate change on dynamic multi-hazard interactions
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
03/12/2024Co-producing and communicating landslide knowledge for risk-informed urban development in Quito
Proceedings of the 17th Pan-American Conference on Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering (XVII PCSMGE), and 2nd Latin-American Regional Conference of the International Association for Engineering Geology and the Environment (IAEG), La Serena Chile, 2024
Drone systems for landslide hazard assessment in Quito
Proceedings of the 17th Pan-American Conference on Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering (XVII PCSMGE), and 2nd Latin-American Regional Conference of the International Association for Engineering Geology and the Environment (IAEG), La Serena Chile, 2024
Slope stability modelling of urbanisation scenarios for communities in north Quito, Ecuador
Geotechnical Engineering Challenges to Meet Current and Emerging Needs of Society
Use of Bayesian Kriging to develop new soil property maps for Quito, Ecuador
Geotechnical Engineering Challenges to Meet Current and Emerging Needs of Society
Synthetic libraries of urban landslide simulations to identify slope failure hotspots and drivers across spatial scales and landscapes
Landslides