AccScience Publishing / AJWEP / Volume 1 / Issue 1 / DOI: 10.3233/AJW-2004-1_1-2_08
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Community Response to Broadcast Media for Cyclone Warning and Disaster Mitigation: A Perception Study of Coastal People with Special Reference to Meghna Estuary in Bangladesh

M. Shahidul Islam1 Mohammad Sahid Ullah2 Alak Paul2
Show Less
1 Department of Geography, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh
2 Department of Communication and Journalism, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh
Received: 28 April 2004 | Accepted: 10 June 2004 | Published online: 1 January 2004
© 2004 by the Author(s). This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )
Abstract

Coastal belt and offshore islands of Bangladesh are vulnerable to catastrophic cyclone hazard. The broadcast media—radio and television—play a very important role to disseminate cyclone warning news bulletins to the people living in those areas, and also act to bridge the gap between the decision makers and the public. Information collected from 400 respondents at nine different areas covering the entire coastal belt suggests that peoples’ ownership and access to any broadcast media has a positive relationship with their family income level. Poor people have very little access to such media news. Those living in weak/ katcha  (cottages and mud made) houses give great importance to media announcement. On the other hand, the frequency of experiences with previous cyclones does not show any impact on media access of those people; rather younger generation, of course with higher level of education, gives more importance to media warning signals than elderly people. It has also been attempted to study community response to cyclone shelter centres and their role to disaster mitigation. Information collected from 200 respondents at Meghna estuary suggests that the construction of cyclone shelter centres in recent years along the vulnerable coastal belt has already shown a remarkable positive result to save human lives during a catastrophic cyclone event. However, problems still remain in selecting appropriate locations for the construction of such centres, including insufficient inside space and internal mismanagement. The catastrophic cyclone of April 1991 had made a tremendous change in the human mindset and despite conservative attitudes of local people, particularly among the women, many of them are now mentally prepared to shift to cyclone shelter centres during the hazard.

Keywords
Broadcast media
disaster mitigation
community response
cyclone centres
Conflict of interest
The authors declare they have no competing interests.
References

Adhikary, A. (2000). The Endless Journey: A Socio-Economical and Environmental Study of the Coastal Region of Bangladesh. Environmental Council Bangladesh, Dhaka, Oxfam.

Ahsan, R.M. and A.Z. Eusuf (1994). Determinants of spatial and gender differences in coastal cyclone shelter use in island and mainland areas in Cox's Bazar. Oriental Geographer, 38(1&2): 44-58.

Hoque, A. and M.S. Islam (2003). Local Wisdom in Disaster Management: Case Studies of Chakoria and Moheskhali. Journal of Bangladesh National Geographical Association, 31(1&2): 34-43.

Islam, A. (1971). Human Adjustment to Cyclone Hazards: A Case Study of Char Jabber. Natural Hazard Research Working Paper no. 18, University of Toronto, Canada.

Islam, A. (1995). Environment Land Use and Natural Hazards in Bangladesh. University of Dhaka, Dhaka.

Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication Research (1995). Preliminary Report on National Media Survey, 1995. Unpublished Press Support Paper, June, 1995.

Khondaker, M.I. (1996). Durjug Mokabelai Upakulia Anchale GonamyddyamerProvab (Effects of Mass Media in Disaster Mitigation). A Survey Conducted at Sandwip Island by the Press Institute of Bangladesh (PIB), Dhaka.

Major, A.M. and L.E. Atwood (1998). Changes in Media Credibility When A Predicted Disaster Doesn’t Happen. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 74(4): 797-813.

Menon, V. (1999). Opening Speech of the “Seminar on Disaster Broadcasting”, Bangkok, October 13, 1999. Organised by Asian Media and Information Centre (AMIC), Singapore and Asian Disaster Preparedness Centre (ADPC), Bangkok (Unpublished).

Paul, A. (1999). Importance of Local Wisdom to Mitigate the Cyclonic Loss: A Perception Study in the Cox’s Bazar District. An unpublished M.Sc Thesis, Department of Geography and Environment, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Paul, A., Rahman, M.M. and A.Q.M. Mahbub (2002). Role of Shelter Center for Cyclone Hazard Mitigation in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. The Chittagong University Journal of Science, 26(1&2): 113-123.

Ritchie, G.N. (1997). Disaster Reduction and Preparedness: Role of Local Self-government Institution. Asia-Pacific Journal of Rural Development, VI(2): 1-14.

Talukder, J., Roy, G.D. and M. Ahmed (1992). Living With Cyclone: Study on Storm Surge Prediction and Disaster Preparedness. Community Development Library, Dhaka.

Ullah, M.S. (2000). Living With Natural Disaster: An Endless Journey of Bangladesh. Disaster Preparedness and Mass Media: A Case Study in the Coastal Region of Bangladesh, 2000. Unpublished Study report, Conducted in 1999-2000 with the support from Hoso-Bunka Foundation, Japan.

UNDP (1991). Report on Cyclone Disaster Response in Bangladesh. Disaster Research Unit, Canada.

White, G.F. (ed.) (1974). Natural Hazards: Local, National & Global, New York.

Wijkman, A. and L. Timberlake (1985). Natural Disaster: Act of God or Acts of Man? Earthscan-UK, Russell Press, UK.

Share
Back to top
Asian Journal of Water, Environment and Pollution, Electronic ISSN: 1875-8568 Print ISSN: 0972-9860, Published by AccScience Publishing