Risk Indexes
At the heart of the World Risk Poll are three indexes which track risk and resilience across the world.
The Indexes
1. The World Worry Index
The World Worry Index shows the countries who worry the most and least and which everyday risks they worry about.
Everyday risks measured by the Poll include: severe weather, violent crime, work, food, water, road crashes and mental health issues.
2. The Experience of Harm Index
The Experience of Harm Index highlights the countries where citizens have the highest levels of experience of everyday risk.
When compared side by side with the World Worry Index, these two indexes show that there can be considerable differences between the way people feel about risks and the actual harms they experience.
3. The Resilience Index
The Resilience Index aims to identify the groups that are most, and least, able to manage “shocks” – instances when risks materialise into disruptive events that threaten their safety.
Composed of Individual, Household, Community and Societal indicators; the Resilience Index provides a broad indicator of overall resilience, as well as differences between countries.
Understanding the Indexes
Both the Worry and Experience indexes are generated from World Risk Poll questions which assess an individuals experience of harm and perception of risk across a variety of categories. Scored out of 1, a higher value indicates either greater worry or a greater experience of harm.
The Worry and Experience Gap firstly demonstrates Worry outstrips Experience in all countries. It is also useful to identify countries with a high level of Worry but a low level of actual Experience. Understanding these gaps will be invaluable to policymakers.
The World Risk Poll Resilience Index is an average of four aspects of resilience (Individual, Household, Community, and Social), which are themselves composites of several questions from the two latest World Risk Polls. As above, the Resilience Index is scored out of 1 with a higher value indicating greater resilience. Explore the World Risk Poll Resilience Index further using our interactive data visualisation.