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Perspectives on Risk Perception Kathleen Tierney Natural Hazards Center University of Colorado at Boulder Was*IS Workshop July 18, 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "Perspectives on Risk Perception Kathleen Tierney Natural Hazards Center University of Colorado at Boulder Was*IS Workshop July 18, 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Perspectives on Risk Perception Kathleen Tierney Natural Hazards Center University of Colorado at Boulder Was*IS Workshop July 18, 2007

2 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics for Discussion Myths and misconceptions about risk perception and assessment Factors affecting perceptions of risk During “normal,” non-crisis times During emergencies

3 www.colorado.edu/hazards Myths and Misconceptions Regarding Risk Perception and Assessment Scientists and experts really understand risk better than laypeople Lay perceptions of risk are erroneous and irrational Risk is a property inherent in things and processes (nuclear power, weather events, etc.)

4 www.colorado.edu/hazards Myths and Misconceptions Since risks can be compared in terms of their likelihood, members of the public are misguided, irrational, and worried about the wrong things, AKA, “Your chances of being struck by lightning are 5,000 times more likely than _____________ “

5 www.colorado.edu/hazards Alternative Ways of Viewing the Issue Risk is a social construct; both experts and the public act on the basis of socially- constructed claims, perceptions and assessments of risk Rather than being inherent in things and processes; risk is ultimately the consequence of societal and institutional dynamics. Thus risk is socially created (for more, see Tierney, “Toward a critical sociology of risk,” “From the margins to the mainstream? Disaster research at the crossroads”)

6 www.colorado.edu/hazards Alternative Ways of Viewing the Issue Because risks are socially constructed—that is, produced through social behavior, activities, and processes—risk comparisons are inherently invalid

7 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics in the Study of Risk Perception: Perceptions as Affected by Perceived properties of different risks (Slovic et al., “Rating the risks”) Mental models of risk and danger: How and why do we think we are we at risk? (Fischhoff, Morgan, and others) Cognitive heuristics: availability, anchoring, etc. (Slovic, Kunreuther, etc.)

8 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics in the Study of Risk Perception: Perceptions as Affected by Personality characteristics and world views: Fatalism Locus of control Religiosity Risk avoidance, aversion Invincibility: “It won’t happen to me”

9 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics in the Study of Risk Perception: Perceptions as Affected by Social relationships and network ties Information-seeking and information sources Socioeconomic characteristics of individuals and groups Gender Race and ethnicity Social class

10 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics in the Study of Risk Perception: Perceptions as Affected by Attitudes regarding the institutions that manage risk (Freudenburg and “recreancy”; “the white male effect”) Emotions (recent work by Slovic)

11 www.colorado.edu/hazards Topics in the Study of Risk Perception: Perceptions as Affected by Broader social processes: Claimsmaking and social problem construction: interest groups, social movements, opinion leaders, lawmakers Issue attention cycles (Downs, “Up and down with ecology”) Media coverage and agenda-setting: the “rhetoric of risk”

12 www.colorado.edu/hazards Factors Affecting Risk Perception in Crisis Contexts Factors discussed earlier remain in play, influence both perceptions and behaviors during crisis events Additional factors come into play in crisis-specific contexts

13 www.colorado.edu/hazards Crisis-Specific Factors Normalcy bias Prior experiences—or lack thereof Environmental cues—or lack thereof Milling and information-seeking Properties of crisis-related messages: clarity, specificity, consistency, certainty/uncertainty Properties of crisis-related message sources: trust vs. mistrust, credibility, believability, etc. Organizational, institutional responses

14 www.colorado.edu/hazards Exercise: Let’s discuss Avian flu Climate change Hurricane Katrina warning, evacuation Color-coded terrorism warnings Nuclear-related risks


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