Abstract

Risk information need to be communicated by trusted groups, in order to promote attitude and behaviour change. We compare different levels of trust in local governments, volunteers in emergency and relief services, and neighbours, and how trust in these groups shapes citizens’ perceptions and actions relating to flood risks. Structural equation modelling is applied to a sample of 2007 flood‐prone households in Austria. A series of cognitive and behavioural responses to flood risks is regressed on trust shown to the three groups. Our findings show that citizens show great trust and attribute high competence to volunteers, which increases risk perception and reduces denial and wishful thinking. Trust in local government downplays risks, makes citizens rely on external help, and promotes fatalism and wishful thinking. Trust in neighbours increases reliance on social support and reinforces wishful thinking. These trust effects reflect the roles and risk narratives of the respective groups. To stimulate specific actions of citizens in flood risk management, the group which addresses the desired actions within its narrative should act as risk communicator. Risk communication could be introduced as a complementary activity in voluntary emergency and relief services, wherein older, retired volunteers seem particularly qualified as risk communicators.

Highlights

  • Numerous Western countries are facing increasing flood risks in residential areas, caused by a lack of stringent regulation in settlement development, accumulation of economic assets in risk areas, and climate change (IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), 2013; APCC (Austrian Panel on Climate Change), 2014)

  • Competence, past performance, and value similarity tend to be higher among trustors who have not been personally affected by a flood or do not live in a flood risk zone (Table 1)

  • This paper examines how households show trust in various stakeholder groups in flood risk communication and how trust in these groups influences risk perception and protective behaviour

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous Western countries are facing increasing flood risks in residential areas, caused by a lack of stringent regulation in settlement development, accumulation of economic assets in risk areas, and climate change (IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), 2013; APCC (Austrian Panel on Climate Change), 2014). The potential of volunteer workers in disaster emergency and relief services as risk communicators’. Risk communicators originating from the same regional context and social milieu, and holding similar worldviews to the targeted citizens, can function as multipliers and change agents (McKenzie-Mohr, 2000; Rogers, 2003). They are qualified to influence citizens by means of social norms, professional knowledge, Seebauer and Babcicky new social contacts or new ideas, eventually triggering preventive action. This paper compares how three stakeholder groups attract trust as risk communicators: local governments, volunteer workers in disaster emergency and relief services, and neighbours. We show that volunteers are the most trusted group and that they shape citizens’ perceptions and actions concerning flood risks

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