Shafran, 2007
Received 20 June 2007
Revised 1 May 2008
Available online 8 May 2008
JEL classification:
Q54
D81
R20
Homeowners living in the wildland–urban interface must decide whether or not to create a defensible
space around their house in order to mitigate the risk of a wildfire destroying their home. Risk
externalities complicate this decision; the risk that one homeowner faces depends on the risk mitigation
decisions of neighboring homeowners. This paper models the problem as a game played between
neighbors in a wildland–urban interface. The model explains why sub-optimal investment in defensible
space is likely and provides insights into the likely effectiveness of programs designed to encourage
households to increase their defensible space. Data from Boulder County, Colorado confirm that a
household’s defensible space decision depends on the defensible space outcomes at neighboring sites.
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