Spatial Effect on Public Risk Perception of Natural Disaster: a Comparative Study in East Asia

This paper explores the effect of geographical location on public risk perception of natural disasters. By conducting an identical questionnaire survey across three East Asia countries (China, Japan and South Korea), the paper finds out that different country has its unique structure of risk percept...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of risk analysis and crisis response 2015, Vol.5 (3), p.161-168
Hauptverfasser: He, Zhongyu, Zhai, Guofang
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper explores the effect of geographical location on public risk perception of natural disasters. By conducting an identical questionnaire survey across three East Asia countries (China, Japan and South Korea), the paper finds out that different country has its unique structure of risk perception. Generally, the risk perception of sample residents in Japan weakens as the distance from the risk source increases, which indicates Japanese people’s risk perception reflects the actual risk probability. On the other hand, Korean partially and Chinese hardly perceive the probability of existing risks. The findings of this paper imply that risk perception to certain extent relates with existing risk, however, the latter is not always correctly perceived. Economic development, socio-political system, historical and cultural backgrounds will affect public risk perceptions.
ISSN:2210-8491
2210-8505
2210-8505
DOI:10.2991/jrarc.2015.5.3.3