Journal
DISASTERS
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 752-770Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/disa.12404
Keywords
cultural and social attitudes; decision-making; disaster risk reduction; early warning system; evacuation; immobility; loss and damage; religious beliefs; risk perception
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While much work has been invested in addressing the economic and technical basis of disaster preparedness, less effort has been directed towards understanding the cultural and social obstacles to and opportunities for disaster risk reduction. This paper presents local insights from five different national settings into the cultural and social contexts of disaster preparedness. In most cases, an early warning system was in place, but it failed to alert people to diverse environmental shocks. The research findings show that despite geographical and typological differences in these locations, the limitations of the systems were fairly similar. In Kenya, people received warnings, but from contradictory systems, whereas in the Philippines and on the island of Saipan, people did not understand the messages or take them seriously. In Bangladesh and Nepal, however, a deeper cultural and religious reasoning serves to explain disasters, and how to prevent them or find safety when they strike.
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