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Journal Article

Citation

Melo PO, Britto RM, Fontainha TC, Leiras A, Bandeira RAM. Nat. Hazards 2017; 89(3): 1343-1368.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11069-017-3023-z

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Warning systems help reduce damage and save lives in disasters; however, there is a lack of research analyzing the population perception of these systems. In Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), because the city slums face the risk of landslides caused by heavy rains, a siren early warning system named "Alerta Rio" was installed in 102 areas. The purpose of this paper was to understand the perception of community leaders regarding this alert system. To this end, a survey was conducted with community leaders to collect data on whether and why the public do or do not attend to the alert.

RESULTS indicated that (1) public adherence to Alerta Rio is low despite the generally positive view of the system, (2) local violence was reported as the reason for staying at home to protect one's property, and (3) problems with temporary shelters and the routes to them result in lack of people's involvement in the system. Whereas these factors are similar to population perception regarding other warning systems, the community leaders also raised the public's lack of trust in the city hall's adopted concept of risk and in the politicians as a relevant factor in the population perception of Alerta Rio. These factors, together with the lack of prevention policies complementary with the alert system, led to perception of reduced importance of the system. For potential solutions to enhance alarm compliance, this study recommends improvement in communication, educational programs, and public engagement strategies tailored for each target group.


Language: en

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