Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria

The Alpine region is expected to be considerably affected by climate change and an increase of settlement area exposed to natural hazards. To respond to emerging challenges due to climate change, land-use changes, and sociodemographic and migration issues, an integrated management of natural hazards...

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Main Authors: Karin Weber, Susanna Wernhart, Therese Stickler, Britta Fuchs, Maria Balas, Johannes Hübl, Doris Damyanovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Mountain Society 2019-05-01
Series:Mountain Research and Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-18-00060.1
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spelling doaj-898bca64229b41b3a812c8e65ed6ccef2020-11-25T02:36:52ZengInternational Mountain SocietyMountain Research and Development0276-47411994-71512019-05-01392D14D2610.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-18-00060.1Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in AustriaKarin Weber0Susanna Wernhart1Therese Stickler2Britta Fuchs3Maria Balas4Johannes Hübl5Doris Damyanovic6Institute of Landscape Planning, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter-Jordan-Straße 65, 1180 Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Mountain Risk Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter-Jordan-Straße 82, 1190 Vienna, AustriaEnvironment Agency Austria, Spittelauerlände 5, 1090 Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Landscape Planning, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter-Jordan-Straße 65, 1180 Vienna, AustriaEnvironment Agency Austria, Spittelauerlände 5, 1090 Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Mountain Risk Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter-Jordan-Straße 82, 1190 Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Landscape Planning, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Peter-Jordan-Straße 65, 1180 Vienna, AustriaThe Alpine region is expected to be considerably affected by climate change and an increase of settlement area exposed to natural hazards. To respond to emerging challenges due to climate change, land-use changes, and sociodemographic and migration issues, an integrated management of natural hazards is needed, including appropriate approaches to risk communication. This study—which included a quantitative street survey, semistructured interviews (Leitfadeninterview), and focus group discussions carried out in 9 Austrian municipalities prone to flooding—found that residents with foreign-born parents and foreign-born residents were underrepresented in local governments and in voluntary organizations related to disaster risk management and therefore often do not participate in decision-making. Nonetheless, ethnicity was often not the prevailing factor that determined vulnerability and modes of coping. Instead, social networks and ownership structures had an important influence on people's ability to recover from past events and prepare for future events. Study participants who had not recently been affected by natural hazards, including floods, generally perceived them as having a low probability of recurrence and ranked them lower than other (daily) risks and struggles. This article aims to contribute to a better understanding of efficient communication as well as target-group–oriented communication channels and contents that foster risk awareness and private adaptation capacity among migrants in rural Austria.https://doi.org/10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-18-00060.1climate change adaptationdisaster risk reductionfloodsmigrantsproperty-level flood-risk adaptationprotection-motivation theoryrisk communication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Weber
Susanna Wernhart
Therese Stickler
Britta Fuchs
Maria Balas
Johannes Hübl
Doris Damyanovic
spellingShingle Karin Weber
Susanna Wernhart
Therese Stickler
Britta Fuchs
Maria Balas
Johannes Hübl
Doris Damyanovic
Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
Mountain Research and Development
climate change adaptation
disaster risk reduction
floods
migrants
property-level flood-risk adaptation
protection-motivation theory
risk communication
author_facet Karin Weber
Susanna Wernhart
Therese Stickler
Britta Fuchs
Maria Balas
Johannes Hübl
Doris Damyanovic
author_sort Karin Weber
title Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
title_short Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
title_full Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
title_fullStr Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
title_full_unstemmed Risk Communication on Floodings: Insights Into the Risk Awareness of Migrants in Rural Communities in Austria
title_sort risk communication on floodings: insights into the risk awareness of migrants in rural communities in austria
publisher International Mountain Society
series Mountain Research and Development
issn 0276-4741
1994-7151
publishDate 2019-05-01
description The Alpine region is expected to be considerably affected by climate change and an increase of settlement area exposed to natural hazards. To respond to emerging challenges due to climate change, land-use changes, and sociodemographic and migration issues, an integrated management of natural hazards is needed, including appropriate approaches to risk communication. This study—which included a quantitative street survey, semistructured interviews (Leitfadeninterview), and focus group discussions carried out in 9 Austrian municipalities prone to flooding—found that residents with foreign-born parents and foreign-born residents were underrepresented in local governments and in voluntary organizations related to disaster risk management and therefore often do not participate in decision-making. Nonetheless, ethnicity was often not the prevailing factor that determined vulnerability and modes of coping. Instead, social networks and ownership structures had an important influence on people's ability to recover from past events and prepare for future events. Study participants who had not recently been affected by natural hazards, including floods, generally perceived them as having a low probability of recurrence and ranked them lower than other (daily) risks and struggles. This article aims to contribute to a better understanding of efficient communication as well as target-group–oriented communication channels and contents that foster risk awareness and private adaptation capacity among migrants in rural Austria.
topic climate change adaptation
disaster risk reduction
floods
migrants
property-level flood-risk adaptation
protection-motivation theory
risk communication
url https://doi.org/10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-18-00060.1
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