Detailed insights into the influence of flood-coping appraisals on mitigation behaviour

•We present empirical data about flood preparedness of 752 flood prone households.•Insights into the influence of coping appraisal on mitigation behaviour are given.•We find that coping appraisal is an important driver of flood mitigation behaviour.•Recommendations for flood risk communication are p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global environmental change 2013-10, Vol.23 (5), p.1327-1338
Hauptverfasser: Bubeck, P., Botzen, W.J.W., Kreibich, H., Aerts, J.C.J.H.
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container_end_page 1338
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1327
container_title Global environmental change
container_volume 23
creator Bubeck, P.
Botzen, W.J.W.
Kreibich, H.
Aerts, J.C.J.H.
description •We present empirical data about flood preparedness of 752 flood prone households.•Insights into the influence of coping appraisal on mitigation behaviour are given.•We find that coping appraisal is an important driver of flood mitigation behaviour.•Recommendations for flood risk communication are provided. Insights into flood mitigation behaviour are important because of the ongoing shift to risk-based flood management approaches in Europe and worldwide, which envisage a contribution from flood-prone households to risk reduction. The recent literature on factors that influence flood mitigation behaviour indicates that flood-coping appraisal is an important variable to understand and explain flood mitigation behaviour. Coping appraisal originates from Protection Motivation Theory (PMT), and refers to the cognitive process that people undergo when evaluating their own ability to avoid a certain risk. However, the empirical literature on the importance of coping appraisal is still scarce, and, in particular, little is known about the independent influence of the three single components of coping appraisal on precautionary behaviour: namely, response efficacy, self-efficacy, and response cost. This study presents the results of a recent survey among 752 flood-prone households along the river Rhine in order to provide detailed insights into the influence of the components of flood-coping appraisal on four different types of flood mitigation behaviour: structural building measures, adapted building use, the deployment of flood barriers, and the purchase of flood insurance. The results confirm that flood-coping appraisal is an important variable in terms of precautionary behaviour. In particular, both response efficacy and self-efficacy contribute to the models which explain the four different types of flood-mitigation behaviour. Based on these findings, it is concluded that risk communication should focus more strongly on the potential of flood-mitigation measures to effectively reduce or avoid flood damage, as well as on information about how to implement such measures in practice.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2013.05.009
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Insights into flood mitigation behaviour are important because of the ongoing shift to risk-based flood management approaches in Europe and worldwide, which envisage a contribution from flood-prone households to risk reduction. The recent literature on factors that influence flood mitigation behaviour indicates that flood-coping appraisal is an important variable to understand and explain flood mitigation behaviour. Coping appraisal originates from Protection Motivation Theory (PMT), and refers to the cognitive process that people undergo when evaluating their own ability to avoid a certain risk. However, the empirical literature on the importance of coping appraisal is still scarce, and, in particular, little is known about the independent influence of the three single components of coping appraisal on precautionary behaviour: namely, response efficacy, self-efficacy, and response cost. This study presents the results of a recent survey among 752 flood-prone households along the river Rhine in order to provide detailed insights into the influence of the components of flood-coping appraisal on four different types of flood mitigation behaviour: structural building measures, adapted building use, the deployment of flood barriers, and the purchase of flood insurance. The results confirm that flood-coping appraisal is an important variable in terms of precautionary behaviour. In particular, both response efficacy and self-efficacy contribute to the models which explain the four different types of flood-mitigation behaviour. Based on these findings, it is concluded that risk communication should focus more strongly on the potential of flood-mitigation measures to effectively reduce or avoid flood damage, as well as on information about how to implement such measures in practice.</abstract><cop>Amsterdam</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><doi>10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2013.05.009</doi><tpages>12</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Appraisals
Building components
cognition
Construction costs
Coping appraisal
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Effectiveness
Engineering and environment geology. Geothermics
Exact sciences and technology
flood control
Flood risk
Floods
Freshwater
Households
Hydrology
Hydrology. Hydrogeology
insurance
Mathematical models
Mitigation behaviour
motivation
Natural hazards: prediction, damages, etc
people
Protection Motivation Theory
Risk
risk communication
risk reduction
self-efficacy
surveys
title Detailed insights into the influence of flood-coping appraisals on mitigation behaviour
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