The landscape of risk communication research

A scientometric analysis

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Floris Goerlandt (Dalhousie University)

Jie Li (Beijing Institute of Technology, Shanghai Maritime University)

Genserik Reniers (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, TU Delft - Technology, Policy and Management, Universiteit Antwerpen)

Research Group
Safety and Security Science
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17093255 Final published version
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
Safety and Security Science
Issue number
9
Volume number
17
Article number
3255
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271
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Abstract

Risk communication is a significant research domain with practical importance in supporting societal risk governance and informed private decision making. In this article, a high-level analysis of the risk communication research domain is performed using scientometrics methods and visualization tools. Output trends and geographical patterns are identified, and patterns in scientific categories determined. A journal distribution analysis provides insights into dominant journals and the domain’s intellectual base. Thematic clusters and temporal evolution of focus topics are obtained using a terms analysis, and a co-citation analysis provides insights into the evolution of research fronts and key documents. The results indicate that the research volume grows exponentially, with by far most contributions originating from Western countries. The domain is highly interdisciplinary, rooted in psychology and social sciences, and branching mainly into medicine and environmental sciences. Narrative themes focus on risk communication in medical and societal risk governance contexts. The domain originated from public health and environmental concerns, with subsequent research fronts addressing risk communication concepts and models. Applied research fronts are associated with environmental hazards, public health, medical risks, nuclear power, and emergency response to various natural hazards. Based on the results, various avenues for future research are described.