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Managing Flash Floods

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Managing Flash Floods Risk Perception from a Cultural Perspective Introductions Who is here Why we are here We all share a common interest in reducing losses to life ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Flash Floods


1
Managing Flash Floods
  • Risk Perception from a Cultural Perspective

2
Introductions
  • 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

3
CLIMAS
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
4
Effective 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
5
Risk 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

6
What 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)
8
Main 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

9
Mary Douglas Risk and Blame
Individualist/Market
Sect/Enclave
Autonomy ?
Isolate
Hierarchy/Bureaucracy
Incorporation ?
10
But its more complicated
Hazard information
Gender Trust Age Self-efficacy Ethnicity
Incorporation Socioeconomic Autonomy Etc. Time
orientation
Risk Perception
Behavior
11
Implications 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

12
Why 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

13
Who 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

14
Plan 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

15
What 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
16
What 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?
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