Author:
Wang Tiantian,Lu Yunmeng,Liu Tiezhong,Zhang Yujiang,Yan Xiaohan,Liu Yi
Abstract
Abstract. In the context of global warming and China's disaster response
patterns, it is critical to understand how to promote the effectiveness of
household flood protection measures among the public. In this study, we
developed a comprehensive theoretical framework based on protection
motivation theory (PMT) to identify the main determinants that influence
urban residents' intention to prepare for flood risk. In addition to the
fundamental factors in PMT, this framework also considered the influence of
individual coping attitudes and social context. We selected urban residents
in flood-prone areas of Henan Province as the study population as well as
collected 857 valid questionnaires through an online survey. Firstly, the
results showed that both threat perception and coping appraisal of flood
risk are effective in increasing residents' intention to prepare. Secondly,
negative risk-coping attitudes reduced people's intention to prepare. If
people do not perceive preparedness actions as absolutely necessary, they
will postpone them or shift their focus to public flood protection measures. In addition,
analysis of affective pathways revealed that negative emotion (worry) was
primarily influenced by perceptions of flood consequences and was not
significantly related to perceptions of likelihood. The analysis of trust
mechanisms showed that higher levels of trust in public flood protection
reduced people's perceptions of flood risk, thereby hindering their intention
to prepare for flood risk. Finally, we found that the positive influence
of social norms on preparedness intentions makes it appropriate to focus on
the power of social mobilization. The findings will provide theoretical
references for government departments to design further policy measures to
improve integrated flood risk management in China.
Funder
National Social Science Fund of China
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
8 articles.
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