The effectiveness of flood risk communication strategies and the influence of social networks-Insights from an agent-based model
Authored by Toon Haer, W J Wouter Botzen, Jeroen C J H Aerts
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2016.03.006
Sponsors:
European Union
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
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Abstract
Flood risk management is becoming increasingly important, because more
people are settling in flood prone areas, and flood risk is increasing
in many regions due to extreme weather events associated with climate
change. It has been proposed that appropriately designed flood risk
communication campaigns can stimulate floodplain inhabitants to prepare
for flooding, and encourage adaptation to climate change. However, such
campaigns do not always result in the desired action, and the
effectiveness of communication in raising flood risk awareness and
improving flood preparedness has hardly been studied. We evaluate
different flood risk communication strategies, using an agent-based
modelling approach, which is especially suitable for examining the
effect of communication on each individual, and how flood risk
communication can propagate through an individual's social network. Our
modelling results show that tailored, people-centred, flood risk
communication can be significantly more effective than the common
approach of top-down government communication, even when tailored
communication reaches fewer individuals. Furthermore, communication on
how to protect against floods, in addition to providing information
about flood risk, is much more effective than the traditional strategy
of communicating only about flood risk. Another main finding is that a
person's social network can have a significant effect on whether or not
individuals take protective action. This leads to the recommendation
that flood risk communication should aim at exploiting this natural
amplifying effect of social networks, for instance, through the use of
social media. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Households
Management
Heterogeneity
Climate-change
Protocol
Perceptions
Mitigation behavior
Netherlands