Should we leave now? Behavioral factors in evacuation under wildfire threat
journal contribution
posted on 2019-04-15, 00:00 authored by J McLennan, B Ryan, Christopher BearmanChristopher Bearman, K TohWildfires pose a serious threat to life in many countries. For police, fire and emergency services authorities in most jurisdictions in North America and Australia evacuation is now the option that is preferred overwhelmingly. Wildfire evacuation modeling can assist authorities in planning evacuation responses to future threats. Understanding residents' behavior under wildfire threat may assist in wildfire evacuation modeling. This paper reviews North American and Australian research into wildfire evacuation behavior published between January 2005 and June 2017. Wildfire evacuation policies differ across the two regions: in North America mandatory evacuations are favored, in Australia most are advisory. Research from both regions indicates that following a wildfire evacuation warning some threatened residents will wish to remain on their property in order to protect it, many will delay evacuating, and some residents who are not on their property when an evacuation warning is issued may seek to return. Mandatory evacuation is likely to result in greater compliance, enforcement policies are also likely to be influential. Self-delayed evacuation is likely if warnings are not sufficiently informative: residents are likely to engage in information search rather than initiating evacuation actions. The wildfire warning and threat histories of a location may influence residents' decisions and actions. The complexities of behavioral factors influencing residents' actions following an evacuation warning pose challenges for wildfire evacuation modeling. Suggestions are offered for ways in which authorities might reduce the numbers of residents who delay evacuating following a wildfire warning. © 2018 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature
History
Volume
55Issue
2Start Page
487End Page
516Number of Pages
30eISSN
1572-8099ISSN
0015-2684Publisher
Springer, USPublisher DOI
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2018-07-01External Author Affiliations
La Trobe University; University of Southern Queensland; RMIT UniversityAuthor Research Institute
- Appleton Institute
Era Eligible
- Yes
Journal
Fire TechnologyUsage metrics
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