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Community Perceptions of Tree Risk and Management

Abbie Judice, Jason Gordon, Jesse Abrams, Kris Irwin

2021Land22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Urban forests (trees growing in urban and peri-urban areas, including villages and large cities) are vital to mitigating the effects of climate change and urbanization but require special considerations such as risk mitigation in developed landscapes. Despite abundant research on risk perceptions of natural hazards, there is limited knowledge about risk perceptions associated with urban trees. As such, this research examines community perceptions of urban tree risk mitigation with a focus on four cities in the U.S. south. To better understand risk perceptions and mitigation, this study employs key informant interviews with community members. Guided by a socio-ecological resilience framework, the findings identify factors affecting resident attitudes towards tree management on the individual parcel and the community levels. The findings benefit tree risk governance in the face of climate variability, which increases societal and environmental vulnerability in urban settings.

Topics & Concepts

Urban forestryVulnerability (computing)UrbanizationEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementPsychological resilienceGeographyFocus groupRisk managementRisk perceptionClimate changeRisk governanceCorporate governancePerceptionBusinessEcologyPsychologyEnvironmental scienceNeurosciencePsychotherapistBiologyMarketingComputer scienceComputer securityFinanceUrban Green Space and HealthLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesFire effects on ecosystems
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