Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand

Public involvement has become a crucial part in increasing the efficiency of disaster management activities nowadays. In particular, collaboration between civil society and municipalities emerge in disaster situations because uncertainties in personal perception compel them to do so more than their...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: I-soon Raungratanaamporn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Environmental Research Institute, Chulalongkorn University 2014-06-01
Series:Applied Environmental Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/saujournalst/www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/aer/article/view/18801
_version_ 1811261265472913408
author I-soon Raungratanaamporn
author_facet I-soon Raungratanaamporn
author_sort I-soon Raungratanaamporn
collection DOAJ
description Public involvement has become a crucial part in increasing the efficiency of disaster management activities nowadays. In particular, collaboration between civil society and municipalities emerge in disaster situations because uncertainties in personal perception compel them to do so more than their own willingness to involved in disaster management activity. Since this appears to have occurred as a response to the 2011 flood situation in Thailand, the question is how a successful was this collaboration? The aim of this research is to identify factors influencing people’s involvement in disaster management activity. The two study objectives are as follows: (1) to elucidate the characteristics of flood responses in the selected case study, and (2) to measure the level of involvement of community members in flood-prone urban areas during the flood situation in 2011. This study area is located in Pak Kret Municipality, Nonthaburi Province, which is considered as one area that was successful in its flood management efforts during the 2011 flood situation. This research utilized a questionnaire survey, which adopts and extends concepts relevant to willingness to pay for and take part in disaster management activities. Five factors were applied to the investigation: (1) Respondents’ information; (2) Decision of respondents to take action, classified by flood inundation level; (3) Perception towards stakeholders in flood management activities; (4) Factors influencing respondents to become involved in flood management activity; and (5) Current preparation and response effort. The study found that external groups such as central and local government, community leaders and members have to take responsibility as first-tier respondents in disaster situations. In the case of collaboration, community members are willing to help government sector as volunteers, and the three most influential factors which led community members to become involved in disaster management activity are level of severity, duration of disaster, and expectation to avoid escalation of the situation.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T19:00:08Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d3b77ad1fde94eac992a6df0dbc057d4
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2287-0741
2287-075X
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T19:00:08Z
publishDate 2014-06-01
publisher Environmental Research Institute, Chulalongkorn University
record_format Article
series Applied Environmental Research
spelling doaj.art-d3b77ad1fde94eac992a6df0dbc057d42022-12-22T03:20:10ZengEnvironmental Research Institute, Chulalongkorn UniversityApplied Environmental Research2287-07412287-075X2014-06-01363Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in ThailandI-soon Raungratanaamporn0Graduate School of Policy Science, Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan Public involvement has become a crucial part in increasing the efficiency of disaster management activities nowadays. In particular, collaboration between civil society and municipalities emerge in disaster situations because uncertainties in personal perception compel them to do so more than their own willingness to involved in disaster management activity. Since this appears to have occurred as a response to the 2011 flood situation in Thailand, the question is how a successful was this collaboration? The aim of this research is to identify factors influencing people’s involvement in disaster management activity. The two study objectives are as follows: (1) to elucidate the characteristics of flood responses in the selected case study, and (2) to measure the level of involvement of community members in flood-prone urban areas during the flood situation in 2011. This study area is located in Pak Kret Municipality, Nonthaburi Province, which is considered as one area that was successful in its flood management efforts during the 2011 flood situation. This research utilized a questionnaire survey, which adopts and extends concepts relevant to willingness to pay for and take part in disaster management activities. Five factors were applied to the investigation: (1) Respondents’ information; (2) Decision of respondents to take action, classified by flood inundation level; (3) Perception towards stakeholders in flood management activities; (4) Factors influencing respondents to become involved in flood management activity; and (5) Current preparation and response effort. The study found that external groups such as central and local government, community leaders and members have to take responsibility as first-tier respondents in disaster situations. In the case of collaboration, community members are willing to help government sector as volunteers, and the three most influential factors which led community members to become involved in disaster management activity are level of severity, duration of disaster, and expectation to avoid escalation of the situation. https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/saujournalst/www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/aer/article/view/18801Public involvementRisk acceptabilityRisk managementFlood
spellingShingle I-soon Raungratanaamporn
Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
Applied Environmental Research
Public involvement
Risk acceptability
Risk management
Flood
title Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
title_full Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
title_fullStr Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
title_short Determination Towards Decision of Public Response in Flood Situation: Case Study in Urban Flood Prone Area in Central Region in Thailand
title_sort determination towards decision of public response in flood situation case study in urban flood prone area in central region in thailand
topic Public involvement
Risk acceptability
Risk management
Flood
url https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/saujournalst/www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/aer/article/view/18801
work_keys_str_mv AT isoonraungratanaamporn determinationtowardsdecisionofpublicresponseinfloodsituationcasestudyinurbanfloodproneareaincentralregioninthailand