Abstract

Understanding household disaster risk perception is crucial to formulate and apply disaster risk reduction strategies. Using survey data from 300 households from three highly disaster-prone areas of the lower Teesta River basin in Bangladesh, this study explores households’ risk perception of drought, earthquake, and flood at the local level. The ordered probit regression model was applied to identify the factors influencing household disaster risk perception. Most of the respondents perceived the likelihood of occurring drought, earthquake, and flood hazards on a large scale in the selected areas which cause negative impacts on their quality of life and financial losses. They have lack knowledge on mitigation actions which makes them unable to control the devastating impacts of disasters. Econometric results show that households’ age, gender, education, and income-generating sources had significantly influenced the respondent’s drought, earthquake, and flood risk perception. Female participants have less knowledge on mitigations actions and are less capable of controlling the hazards than their counterparts making them more vulnerable to the impacts of hazards. Urgent action is required to improve their socio-economic conditions, and to reduce the knowledge gap between males and females as well as to improve the household’s understanding of mitigation and preparedness for disaster risk.

Highlights

  • Risk perception (RP) is an essential constituent for formulating and implementing disaster risk reduction (DRR) approaches and plans (Peacock et al, 2005; Sattar and Cheung, 2019)

  • This work aims to fill the void in the knowledge gap in risk perception study in the Lower Teesta Basin (LTB) of northern Bangladesh

  • We have prepared common statistics on seven RP items based on Likert scale 0– 5 for the drought, earthquake, and flood hazards

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Summary

Introduction

Risk perception (RP) is an essential constituent for formulating and implementing disaster risk reduction (DRR) approaches and plans (Peacock et al, 2005; Sattar and Cheung, 2019). Earthquake is not a frequently occurring event in northern Bangladesh, this region is seismically active due to the Dauki fault and Shillong plateau in its north causing infrastructure disruption, environmental disruption, and so on when it occurs (Paul and Bhuiyan, 2010; Haque, 2015; Islam et al, 2016) These disasters cause huge losses of crops resulted in regional and seasonal food insecurity, livelihood loss, migration-related crises, psychological problem, and environmental degradation (Paul, 1997; Paul, 1998; Azad et al, 2013; Islam et al, 2014; Barua et al, 2016; Rahman, 2017; Mardy et al, 2018; Haque et al, 2019). It is crucial to assess RP at local-scale, instead of constructing a generalize idea by considering a large area

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