Predicting Evacuation in Two Major Disasters: Risk Perception, Social Influence, and Access to Resources

JASMIN K. RIAD, FRAN H. NORRIS and R. BARRY RUBACK

Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 29 (1999): 918-934








Abstract:

The complex and somewhat bewildering phenomenon of why people sometimes decide not to evacuate from a dangerous situation is influenced by a combination of individual characteristics and 3 basic social psychological processes: (a) risk perception, (b) social influence, and (c) access to resources. This study used a combined sample of 777 adults interviewed after Hurricanes Hugo and Andrew. Although numerous variables significantly predicted evacuation, much variance in behavior still remained unexplained. Different population subgroups gave different reasons for not evacuating (e.g. severeness of storm, territoriality). A multifaceted and tailored approach to both individuals and communities is needed; a simple warning is not enough.  


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