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Journal Article

Citation

Ball RJ, Hudson-Doyle EE, Nuth M, Hopkins WJ, Brunsdon D, Brown CO. Civ. Eng. Environ. Syst. 2022; 39(2): 144-164.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/10286608.2022.2089980

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Policy and technical guidance are only as good as their implementation. Often well-meaning legislation has unintended consequences, as individuals and organisations overlay their own risk perceptions and understanding to an issue.This paper illustrates how behavioural science can be applied to risk-based engineering decisions to improve decision outcomes. It is framed around an analysis of the management of earthquake prone public buildings in New Zealand. It demonstrates how the individual, social and cultural contexts can influence how risks and impacts are perceived, evaluated, and communicated. The framing of the decision, unconscious biases, cognitive limitations, trust, and other social influences are all critical factors in translation of technical policy to effective outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

decision making; earthquake prone buildings; policy implementation; Risk management

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