“…In the nuclear power domain, vulnerability can be categorized into two areas: (i) vulnerability as a measurement of “risk” (e.g., regional risk assessment (Baklanov & Mahura, ; Baklanov et al., ; Baklanov, Sørensen, & Mahura, ; Rigina & Baklanov, ) and postaccident mental health effect assessment (Kunii et al., ; Mashiko et al., ; Solomon & Bromet, )), or (ii) vulnerability compared with NPP risk assessments, where exposure to risk is viewed from the perspective of the local population (e.g., environmental justice, NPP siting) (Alldred & Shrader‐Frechette, ; Cousins, Karban, Li, & Zapanta, ; Kosmicki, ; Kyne, ; Kyne & Bolin, ; Satterfield, Mertz, & Slovic, ; Shrader‐Frechette, ). This article, however, adapts the concept of social vulnerability, developed by Cutter, Boruff, and Shirley () in the context of natural hazards (Bakkensen, Fox‐Lent, Read, & Linkov, ; Cutter et al., ), for the context of a severe nuclear accident.…”