The role of prior experience in informing and motivating earthquake preparedness
journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-31, 00:00 authored by JS Becker, D Paton, DM Johnston, Kevin Ronan, J McClure© 2017 The Authors Motivating household preparedness for earthquakes can be difficult, especially given the infrequent and varying nature of major events. Past research has shown that people's experiences contribute to their beliefs about whether, and how, they should prepare for earthquakes. Direct experience of a disaster can be a strong motivator of preparedness; however, most people will not directly experience a large damaging earthquake in their lifetimes. They instead need to rely on experience of small earthquakes, experience of different disasters, adverse life experiences (e.g. accidents), or vicarious experience. This paper explores the influence of such experiences on earthquake preparedness. The research found that experience has seven different influences on the preparedness process including: prompting thinking and talking; raising awareness and knowledge; helping individuals understand the consequences of a disaster; developing beliefs; developing preparedness; influencing emotions and feelings; and prompting community interaction on disaster issues.
History
Volume
22Start Page
179End Page
193Number of Pages
15ISSN
2212-4209Publisher
ElsevierPublisher DOI
Additional Rights
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2017-03-14External Author Affiliations
Joint Centre for Disaster Research; Charles Darwin University; Massey University; Victoria University WellingtonEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
International Journal of Disaster Risk ReductionUsage metrics
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