Across the world, cities are growing, blurring lines between urban and rural. In Australia, peri-urban areas are undergoing demographic shifts and extensive development. In the literature, these shifts are characterised by differences in the risk perceptions and hazard experiences between established and incoming residents. In this paper, we illustrate how some of these differences are perceived by focusing on house and contents insurance in the bushfire-prone City of Whittlesea on the fringes of Greater Melbourne. This location captures the complex relationship between growing population and high bushfire risk, and is the site of the country’s deadliest bushfire event, Black Saturday, in 2009. Through in-depth interviews, we observe that residents perceive insurance as playing a role in peri-urban change. Specifically, underinsurance is understood to be a challenge faced by many impacted by the Black Saturday fires, and contributes to feelings of uncertainty regarding the capacities of changing communities to work together to prepare for and recover from future fires. Our focus on insurance is informed by the need to better understand the social qualities of this dimension of disaster preparedness and recovery, and how perceptions of insurance amid peri-urban change may help produce social patterns and trends.
Funding
Australian Research Council
History
Publication title
Australian Geographer
Volume
53
Pagination
41-60
ISSN
0004-9182
Department/School
School of Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2022 Geographical Society of New South Wales Inc.
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Social impacts of climate change and variability; Expanding knowledge in human society