Understanding differences in environmental risk perception and risk judgments might facilitate the development of effective environmental risk management strategies, including risk communication. Cultural theory holds that systematic individual differences exist in the perception of environmental risks based on four different myths of nature: nature benign, nature ephemeral, nature perverse/tolerant, and nature capricious. The myths of nature represent distinct perceptions toward environmental risks, which are assumed to be closely related to preferences for appropriate risk management strategies. The authors examined to what extent myths of nature are related to beliefs associated with problems of car use and preferences for strategies to ...
It has been stressed within social sciences that risk management has focused too much on technical s...
This paper describes a cross-cultural research project on the relation between how people conceptual...
Abstract: Understanding the differences in the risk judgments of residents of industrial communities...
Understanding differences in environmental risk perception and risk judgments might facilitate the d...
It is often assumed that higher environmental concern goes with more positive attitudes toward envir...
This study addresses one of the main research problems in the area of environmental hazard risk—to e...
A mail survey on ecological risk perception was administered in the summer of 2002 to a randomized s...
This study addresses one of the main research problems in the area of environmental hazard risk—to e...
Cultural perspectives shape responses to climate change. This research examines ‘myths of physical n...
Decision-makers often despair at what they regard as fickle and unpredictable public atti...
This study integrates cultural theory of risk into the risk information seeking and processing model...
This paper examines two hypotheses of risk perception: cultural theory\u27s distinction between insi...
This is an empirical and quantitative study of the validity of four kinds of distal explana-tory fac...
It is proposed that risk perception is partly driven by notions of what is seen as unnatural and imm...
We describe the results of a study to determine the synthetic-biology risk perceptions of a large an...
It has been stressed within social sciences that risk management has focused too much on technical s...
This paper describes a cross-cultural research project on the relation between how people conceptual...
Abstract: Understanding the differences in the risk judgments of residents of industrial communities...
Understanding differences in environmental risk perception and risk judgments might facilitate the d...
It is often assumed that higher environmental concern goes with more positive attitudes toward envir...
This study addresses one of the main research problems in the area of environmental hazard risk—to e...
A mail survey on ecological risk perception was administered in the summer of 2002 to a randomized s...
This study addresses one of the main research problems in the area of environmental hazard risk—to e...
Cultural perspectives shape responses to climate change. This research examines ‘myths of physical n...
Decision-makers often despair at what they regard as fickle and unpredictable public atti...
This study integrates cultural theory of risk into the risk information seeking and processing model...
This paper examines two hypotheses of risk perception: cultural theory\u27s distinction between insi...
This is an empirical and quantitative study of the validity of four kinds of distal explana-tory fac...
It is proposed that risk perception is partly driven by notions of what is seen as unnatural and imm...
We describe the results of a study to determine the synthetic-biology risk perceptions of a large an...
It has been stressed within social sciences that risk management has focused too much on technical s...
This paper describes a cross-cultural research project on the relation between how people conceptual...
Abstract: Understanding the differences in the risk judgments of residents of industrial communities...