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Effective risk communication as a factor in managing protests attitudes in a local community
Эффективная риск-коммуникация как фактор регулирования протестных настроений в локальном сообществе
[journal article]
Abstract
Contemporary research into the perception of environmental risks suffers from poor knowledge of risk communication in the local community and of how different ways of risk communication affect protest attitudes. This study aims to clarify communication strategies and practices used by members of loc... view more
Contemporary research into the perception of environmental risks suffers from poor knowledge of risk communication in the local community and of how different ways of risk communication affect protest attitudes. This study aims to clarify communication strategies and practices used by members of local communities as a protest response to environmental threats. The work builds on the cultural theory developed by Douglas, Dake, Bremen, and others. This theory distinguishes between several cultural types (hierarchism, individualism, communitarianism, and egalitarianism), which differ in how environmental risks are perceived and what forms risk communication takes. The study investigates the case of the village of Nivenskoe in Russia’s Kaliningrad region where residents opposed the development of a potassium salt deposit. It is concluded that egalitarians and communitarians are more likely than hierarchists and individualists to participate in protests when a serious environmental threat arises. Respondents of all cultural types tend to trust information coming from their close social network, public figures, and environmentalists whereas people of business are trusted the least.... view less
Keywords
protest behavior; environmental consciousness; risk communication; public opinion; environmental damage; culture; Russia; theory
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
local community
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 70-83
Journal
Baltic Region, 12 (2020) 2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2020-2-5
ISSN
2079-8555
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed