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- Author(s):
- William Kakenmaster, Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Debra Javeline, Angela Chesler
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2022-07-19
- Record Visibility:
- Public
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- Author(s):
- Debra Javeline, Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Angela Chesler
- Abstract:
Subsidized insurance is often described as a perverse incentive, moral hazard, or maladaptation that perpetuates coastal resi-dencies in vulnerable homes despite increasing safety and economic risks from hurricanes, sea level rise, and other climate change impacts.Insurance is also often described as a positive factor in coastal risk reduction if insurers proactively reward homeowners for upgradesthat mitigate losses from hurricanes. The empirical and policy-relevant question remains whether …
- Date Published:
- 2022
- Record Visibility:
- Public
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- Author(s):
- Angela Chesler, Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Debra Javeline
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2021-10-07
- Record Visibility:
- Public
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- Author(s):
- Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Debra Javeline, Angela Chesler
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2021-10-07
- Record Visibility:
- Public
-
5
Document
- Author(s):
- Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Debra Javeline
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2018-05-22
- Record Visibility:
- Public
-
6
Document
- Author(s):
- Debra Javeline, Tracy Kijewski-Correa
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2017-06-13
- Record Visibility:
- Public
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- Author(s):
- Debra Javeline, Tracy Kijewski-Correa
- Abstract:
As climate changes, coastal homeowners are potentially crucial actors in reducing the risks to property and human life from rising seas and increased hurricane activity. Absent strict, enforceable regulations mandating retrofitting of existing homes or major changes in homeowner insurance requirements, coastal resilience in a changing climate will largely reflect private, voluntary decisions of millions of individuals. However, research is scarce on the current risk level of U.S. coastal home…
- Date Created:
- 2017-12-15
- Record Visibility:
- Public