The interrelationship between travel behavior and life choices in adapting to flood disasters |
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Authors: | Qing-Chang Lu Junyi Zhang A. B. M. Sertajur Rahman |
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Affiliation: | 1.State Key Laboratory of Ocean Engineering, School of Naval Architecture, Oceanic and Civil Engineering,Shanghai Jiao Tong University,Shanghai,China;2.Graduate School for International Development and Cooperation,Hiroshima University,Higashi-Hiroshima,Japan;3.Roads and Highways Department,Dhaka,Bangladesh |
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Abstract: | Disasters resulting from climate change are shown to be important determinants of people’s life choice decisions. In the literature, travel behavior choice and life choices are usually addressed separately under disasters such as flood and cyclone. However, travel behavior may be interdependent with other life choices, jointly shaping people’s adaptation decisions. To this end, the paper advances the literature by exploring the interrelationship between changes in travel behavior and job and residential location under flood disasters, while separating coastal and inland observations. For this purpose, a stated preference survey was conducted in 14 cities of Bangladesh in early 2013. An analysis approach based on structural equation modeling was developed to investigate the correlations between travel behavior change and job and residential location changes. Model estimation results suggest that flood impacts have significant influences on inland people’s life choices, while coastal people’s life choices are mainly affected by flood adaptation responses and attitudes. Significant correlations between travel behavior change and job and residential location changes are found for both observations. Moreover, both coastal and inland people tend not to change residential locations if changes in job location and travel behavior are made. Inland people may not change travel behavior if their job and/or residential locations are changed, but coastal people’s job and residential location changes are associated with changes in travel behavior. Travel behavior change is found to have more of an effect on residential location change than job location change in both regions. These findings conclude that the two-way relationship between travel behavior and life choices should be taken into account in future analyses, and thus adaptation policies to climate change disasters could be better linked with people’s behavioral responses. |
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