Fire
officials are often dismayed to discover that victims of wildfire often
blame
fire fighters and others responsible for fire management for damage
resulting
from uncontrolled fires. This is in
spite of the fact wildfire damage is
generally a consequence of dynamic interactions among natural factors
(wind,
temperature, location of wildfire, topography, etc.) and human factors
(past
land management, promptness of firefighting activities, availability of
homeowners’ defensible space, etc.).
Fire and land managers do not typically understand why and how
the
victims arrive at such oversimplified and in some cases, inaccurate
conclusions
about wildfire causation. Attribution
theory in social psychology provides a framework for understanding the
mechanisms of these blaming processes.
In this study, both quantitative and qualitative approaches were
used to
explore how people, who live in wildfire hazard zones and experienced
wildfire,
perceive the causes of wildfire damage. In the spring of 1999 pre-fire
survey
was conducted in the western slope of the