Title: Managing Flash Floods
1Managing Flash Floods
- Risk Perception from a Cultural Perspective
2Introductions
- Who is here
- Why we are here
- We all share a common interest in reducing losses
to life and property from flash floods - What to expect from this meeting
- Overview of proposed risk perception research
project - Discussion How to make this information useful
and practical for implementation
3CLIMAS
AFMA, NWS, ADEM, FCDs, etc.
Forging the partnership
Fieldwork surveys and analysis
Present findings, feedback, brainstorming
Develop new products
Implement new products
Ashley Coless masters thesis
Final report
4Effective warnings must be
- Heard
- Understood
- What is happening, time, how to prepare
- Believed
- Warning is true, danger is imminent
- Personalized
- Risk to self or property is perceived
- Responded to
Mileti, 1995
5Risk perception researchTypical approaches
- There is an appropriate response, anything else
is irrational - Behavior as a result of individual psychological
(dis?)function - Behavior as a result of human nature
- People need more education and information
- More recently and frequently, studies are
beginning to account for the effects of cultural
and social contexts
6What is culture?
- A way of life learned from and shared by a social
unit - Attitudes, beliefs, values, and habits
- Not just national, also gender, ethnicity,
religion, cohort or generation, historical
period, profession, social class, and country of
origin (Kitayama Markus, 1995, p. 368) - Norms, values, and practices shape how
individuals process information and make
decisions
7(No Transcript)
8Main cultural factors
- Trust
- In science, government, and responsible agency
- Self-efficacy
- How confident people feel in their ability to
handle ordinary life as well as extreme events - Social incorporation
- Extent of social networks
- Social amplification of risk
- Social autonomy
- Degree of freedom to fill any social role
- Time orientation
- Focus on past, present, or future
9Mary Douglas Risk and Blame
Individualist/Market
Sect/Enclave
Autonomy ?
Isolate
Hierarchy/Bureaucracy
Incorporation ?
10But its more complicated
Hazard information
Gender Trust Age Self-efficacy Ethnicity
Incorporation Socioeconomic Autonomy Etc. Time
orientation
Risk Perception
Behavior
11Implications for mitigation
- Can education and information are likely to
change attitudes, values, and beliefs? - Risk managers must speak to these attitudes,
values, and beliefs - Which means that managers must know the people
they are responsible for protecting
12Why use a survey?
- Can perform both quantitative and qualitative
analyses on the data - Quantitative regression analysis
- Qualitative open-ended questions for deeper
insight - Able to reach a broad spectrum of various
cultural groups
13Who is the target sample?
- People who have crossed flooded washes
- Problematic because of death, stigma, and number
of successful crossings - 1000 Tucson residents in flood prone areas
- Specific neighborhoods with proximity to commonly
flooded intersections or crossings
14Plan to increase response rate
- Week 1 First survey packet mailed out
- Survey in English and Spanish
- Consent forms
- Reply-paid envelope
- Week 2 Reminder Postcard
- Week 3 Second survey packet mailed out
- Offer drawing for 20 Visa Gift Card
- Reduce effects of stigma
15What does the survey ask?
- Using direct and indirect methods
- Cultural factors
- Historical and hypothetical behavior
- Relevant demographic information
Compared to the average person, I am a good judge
of whether flood waters are dangerous. Complete
ly Somewhat Neutral Somewhat Completely Disagree
Disagree Agree Agree
16What do you think?
- Is this potentially useful for your flood
mitigation decision-making? - Do you have the desire and ability to implement
new mitigation strategies based on these
findings? - What information would you like to gather with
the survey tool?