The influence of home and community attachment on firewise behavior

Kyle, GT; Theodori, GL; Absher, JD; Jun, J

HERO ID

7310451

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

HERO ID 7310451
In Press No
Year 2010
Title The influence of home and community attachment on firewise behavior
Authors Kyle, GT; Theodori, GL; Absher, JD; Jun, J
Journal Society and Natural Resources
Volume 23
Issue 11
Page Numbers 1075-1092
Abstract The purpose of this investigation was to examine the influence of residents’ attachment to their homes and community on their willingness to adopt Firewise recommendations. Our sample was drawn from a population residing in the wildland–urban interface where the threat of wildfire is acute. The Firewise recommendations concerned 13 activities affecting home design, construction and maintenance, landscaping, and community engagement. Consistent with the tenets offered by the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion and empirical evidence stemming from the place and community attachment literatures, we hypothesized that those most attached to their homes and community would be most inclined to adopt Firewise recommendations to protect these settings. For the most part, our findings were consistent with this hypothesis. We observed that the dimensions of home attachment were most strongly predictive of activities centered on and around the home, whereas community attachment was more strongly predictive of community-based activities.
Doi 10.1080/08941920902724974
Wosid CCC:000282586600004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword community attachment; Firewise; home attachment; place attachment; wildland fire