Abstract

ABSTRACT This study investigates the extent to which risk perception regarding disasters among individuals living in slum areas interrelates with their material well-being in determining their place attachment, which may affect their household resilience. To assess this, we take relevant measures from previous studies and run a confirmatory factor analysis to test their validity. All the measures are shown to have a good fit with the data. Our findings reveal a significant mediational relationship between measures of material well-being and household resilience through place attachment although, counterintuitively, the mediated relationship between subjective material well-being and household resilience was negative. The mediated relationship is only valid for the subjective material well-being predictor and among those with a high level of risk perception. These findings suggest that risk perception determines the way an individual’s subjective material well-being predicts their attachment to their living place, which relates to their household resilience.

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