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Voluntary and involuntary risk acceptance: A case study of firefighters

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/2686
View/Open: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85109690627&doi=10.1016%2fj.ssci.2021.105394&partnerID=40&md5=689409d2b708436ffd19627d26154ae0
ISSN: 9257535
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105394
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Author
Rodríguez Garzón, Ignacio; Martínez Fiestas, Myriam; Darmohraj, A.; Delgado Padial, Antonio; Chumpitaz, R. [et al.]
Date
2021
Subject/s

Bombero

Riesgos laborales

Riesgo percibido

Buenos Aires (Argentina)

Paradigma psicométrico

Evaluación de riesgos laborales

Unesco Subject/s

6109.01 Prevención de Accidentes

5311.04 Organización de Recursos Humanos

5311.07 Investigación Operativa

Abstract

This article examines how individuals perceive risk depending on whether their exposure to it is voluntarily or not. The study gleans its conclusions by comparing a sample of professional (N = 186) and volunteer (N = 199) firefighters from Buenos Aires (Argentina). The Psychometric Paradigm was selected as the tool to measure risk perception as it yields detailed results from a global perspective based on different attributes and dimensions. The findings reveal significant differences from one group to another. Volunteer firefighters, in fact, reveal lower levels of risk perception that career professionals. Furthermore, a linear hierarchical regression suggests that levels of voluntariness can help predict perception of risk. The study then discusses the different contributions of its findings to academia, to risk management and to the internal marketing of organizations before concluding with a series of recommendations as to potential lines of research. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd

This article examines how individuals perceive risk depending on whether their exposure to it is voluntarily or not. The study gleans its conclusions by comparing a sample of professional (N = 186) and volunteer (N = 199) firefighters from Buenos Aires (Argentina). The Psychometric Paradigm was selected as the tool to measure risk perception as it yields detailed results from a global perspective based on different attributes and dimensions. The findings reveal significant differences from one group to another. Volunteer firefighters, in fact, reveal lower levels of risk perception that career professionals. Furthermore, a linear hierarchical regression suggests that levels of voluntariness can help predict perception of risk. The study then discusses the different contributions of its findings to academia, to risk management and to the internal marketing of organizations before concluding with a series of recommendations as to potential lines of research. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd

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