Abstract:This study invites readers to experience risk on Australia ’s hazardous rocky coasts with the rock fishing community. In the paper, we offer an understanding of risk that is relational, a process that emerges within human–environment interactions in a dynamic coastal space that is constantly changing. Exploring the in situ and ongoing sensory attunement of the fishers, we contend, expands upon the quantitative understandings that tend to be deployed by risk managers, offering an innovative approach to conceptua… Show more
“…These findings are not new. Rock fishing is a popular activity for migrants, particularly among those from Asian countries, in Australia and New Zealand 16,40-42 . Recent coronial inquests in Australia recommended mandatory lifejacket wearing when rock fishing to prevent drowning deaths 43 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A long‐term education campaign in New Zealand was successful in increasing lifejacket wear among culturally diverse rock fishers over a decade, 42 indicating that adopting safety behaviours takes time, especially when focusing on people from diverse backgrounds. Furthermore, research suggests that rock fishing safety interventions need to be multi‐faceted and involve the rock‐fishing community 40-42 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rock fishing is a popular activity for migrants, particularly among those from Asian countries, in Australia and New Zealand. 16,[40][41][42] Recent coronial inquests in Australia recommended mandatory lifejacket wearing when rock fishing to prevent drowning deaths. 43 Subsequently, the NSW Government introduced through legislation the compulsory wearing of lifejackets when rock fishing from December 2016.…”
Section: Activity Being Undertaken Prior To Drowningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, research suggests that rock fishing safety interventions need to be multi-faceted and involve the rock-fishing community. [40][41][42] Swimming was the leading activity being undertaken prior to drowning for both migrants and Australian-born people. The WHO promotes swimming and survival skills as a protective factor for drowning for all ages.…”
Section: Activity Being Undertaken Prior To Drowningmentioning
“…These findings are not new. Rock fishing is a popular activity for migrants, particularly among those from Asian countries, in Australia and New Zealand 16,40-42 . Recent coronial inquests in Australia recommended mandatory lifejacket wearing when rock fishing to prevent drowning deaths 43 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A long‐term education campaign in New Zealand was successful in increasing lifejacket wear among culturally diverse rock fishers over a decade, 42 indicating that adopting safety behaviours takes time, especially when focusing on people from diverse backgrounds. Furthermore, research suggests that rock fishing safety interventions need to be multi‐faceted and involve the rock‐fishing community 40-42 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rock fishing is a popular activity for migrants, particularly among those from Asian countries, in Australia and New Zealand. 16,[40][41][42] Recent coronial inquests in Australia recommended mandatory lifejacket wearing when rock fishing to prevent drowning deaths. 43 Subsequently, the NSW Government introduced through legislation the compulsory wearing of lifejackets when rock fishing from December 2016.…”
Section: Activity Being Undertaken Prior To Drowningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, research suggests that rock fishing safety interventions need to be multi-faceted and involve the rock-fishing community. [40][41][42] Swimming was the leading activity being undertaken prior to drowning for both migrants and Australian-born people. The WHO promotes swimming and survival skills as a protective factor for drowning for all ages.…”
Section: Activity Being Undertaken Prior To Drowningmentioning
“…Perhaps the only consistency across the climate change discourse is recognition that current approaches are not having the impact that climate experts believe is needed (IPCC, ). Given the failure of existing educative efforts (Wolf & Moser, ), there is need to extend consideration to include how experts' contribute to the making of allegedly inactive publics (Cornes & Cook, ; Cornes, Cook, Satizábal, & Melo Zurita, in press; Kamstra, Cook, Edensor, & Kennedy, ), which requires including experts and their boundary making as part of publics' (non)responsiveness (Beck & Mahony, ; Waterton, ). As Brian Wynne has arguedAs part of an expert‐inclusive review, there is need to explore the values that experts hold but are reticent to admit or negotiate (Davies, ; O'Brien, ; Oreskes, ).…”
Section: Behavior Change: Whose Behavior and How To Change?mentioning
This review is written for climate experts dissatisfied with current approaches for contributing to societal responses to climate change via their interactions with publics. We review the origins and contemporary manifestations of the deficit model, showing that it is the underlying basis for how experts imagine and conduct their interactions with publics. Rather than simply raising awareness among experts concerning their role(s) in perpetuating the deficit model, we use experts and their assumptions to organize our synthesis. Our review will challenge climate experts by demonstrating that educative approaches are inadequate if their goal is to influence behavior by publics. We demonstrate that experts' prevailing means of contributing to socioscientific controversies are crippled, not by public indifference or ignorance, but by experts' allegiance to the assumption that information transfer can prompt behavior change. The transfer of climate experts' knowledge by itself has little chance of changing publics' behaviors. It may be that such approaches work with people already disposed to the information or who defer to experts, but it is unlikely to affect publics who are doubtful, those whose livelihoods are precarious, or those who do not want to consider the terrifying implications of climate change. We propose relationship building as an alternative that can avoid resuscitating the deficit model and its inherent problems. We argue that, to have the impacts that they are seeking, experts will need to negotiate their ends honestly, admit the values driving those ends, and coproduce the means that can accomplish the collaboratively chosen ends.
This article is categorized under:
Perceptions, Behavior, and Communication of Climate Change > Communication
Social Status of Climate Change Knowledge > Sociology/Anthropology of Climate Knowledge
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