Rufat, Samuel; de Brito, Mariana Madruga; Fekete, Alexander; Comby, Emeline; Robinson, Peter J.; Armaş, Iuliana; Botzen, W.J. Wouter; Kuhlicke, Christian:
Surveying the Surveyors to Address Risk Perception and Adaptive-Behaviour Cross-Study Comparability
In: Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Jg. 22 (2022), Heft 8, S. 2655 - 2672
2022Aufsatz / Artikel in ZeitschriftOpen Access
Fakultät für Anlagen, Energie- und Maschinensysteme » Institut für Rettungsingenieurwesen und Gefahrenabwehr
Titel in Englisch:
Surveying the Surveyors to Address Risk Perception and Adaptive-Behaviour Cross-Study Comparability
Autor*in:
Rufat, Samuel
SCOPUS
24437420400
;
de Brito, Mariana Madruga
SCOPUS
57189252152
;
Fekete, AlexanderTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0002192
SCOPUS
33867547100
SCOPUS
57902805100
Sonstiges
der TH Köln zugeordnete Person
;
Comby, Emeline
SCOPUS
56067931300
;
Robinson, Peter J.
SCOPUS
57202435836
;
Armaş, Iuliana
SCOPUS
15025842100
;
Botzen, W.J. Wouter
SCOPUS
24072972400
;
Kuhlicke, Christian
SCOPUS
12787469400
Erscheinungsjahr:
2022
OA-Publikationsweg:
Open Access
Scopus ID
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Ressourcentyp:
Text
Access Rights:
Open Access
Praxispartner*in:
Nein
Kategorie:
Forschung
Teil der Statistik:
Teil der Statistik

Abstract in Englisch:

One of the key challenges for risk, vulnerability and resilience research is how to address the role of risk perceptions and how perceptions influence behaviour. It remains unclear why people fail to act adaptively to reduce future losses, even when there is ever-richer information available on natural and human-made hazards (flood, drought, etc.). The current fragmentation of the field makes it an uphill battle to cross-validate the results of existing independent case studies. This, in turn, hinders comparability and transferability across scales and contexts and hampers recommendations for policy and risk management. To improve the ability of researchers in the field to work together and build cumulative knowledge, we question whether we could agree on (1) a common list of minimal requirements to compare studies, (2) shared criteria to address context-specific aspects of countries and regions, and (3) a selection of questions allowing for comparability and long-term monitoring. To map current research practices and move in this direction, we conducted an international survey – the Risk Perception and Behaviour Survey of Surveyors (Risk-SoS). We find that most studies are exploratory in nature and often overlook theoretical efforts that would enable the comparison of results and an accumulation of evidence. While the diversity of approaches is an asset, the robustness of methods is an investment to be made. Surveyors report a tendency to reproduce past research design choices but express frustration with this trend, hinting at a turning point. To bridge the persistent gaps, we offer several recommendations for future studies, particularly grounding research design in theory; improving the formalisation of methods; and formally comparing theories and constructs, methods, and explanations while collecting the themes and variables most in use.