Sociology | Social risks represent the probability of some threats and uncertainties which have arisen as a result of modernising the society, which imply irreversible damage for all forms of life (Beck 1992) |
Social risks represent key-factors for economic and social cohesion, which contribute to increasing the local community’s quality of life (Hruska-Tvrdy, Foldynova 2011) |
Geography | The social risk refers to the possibility for a potential social disturbance, conflicts and social damages, caused by insecurity factors from different fields. Modern social risks refer to dangers and insecurity from the systematic process of modernisation (Li Hong et al. 2017) |
Risk is the combination of the probability of an event and its negative consequences (Bălteanu, Sima 2013) |
The probability of possible losses (loss of human life, injury, disturbance in economic activities, goods deteriorated or destroyed, alterations of the environment) determined by a certain danger, under some circumstances of exposure and vulnerability (UNISDR 2009) |
Psychology | The social risk represents the susceptibility in compromising one’s survival/quality of life, or in provoking socio-economic disturbances. (Larousse 1999) |
The probability of a loss as a level or degree of a possible loss, as a weighted loss according to its probability, or as a variant of an event. For the public, the risk can be any of these occurrences and maybe even more than that, risks can be seen in almost every field in our lives (Havârneanu 2015) |
Law and social security | The social risk refers to a series of unfavourable events (loss of income, incapacity for work, etc.) which involve income discontinuity; the total or the partial loss of income (Convention No. 102/1952 of the International Labour Organisation) |
The probability of potential losses as a consequence of the post-industrial transition, of deindustrialisation, of poor employment, of increased instability of family structures (Bonoli 2007) |
Economy | The social risk is a potential danger under the action of a possible event, predictable or unpredictable, which generates profits or material losses that should not be seen only as a negative event, because it can also bring extraordinary opportunities for those who are able to assess and deal with it (Ziman 2013) |
The social risks are a phenomenon which must be evaluated from the viewpoint of society and not from that of an individual, having two essential dimensions: economic inequality and the inequal distribution of the resources among society members (Rohde I., Rohde K. 2015) |
The social risk is the possibility for some potential threats to emerge and as a threat to the possibility of maintaining social relations and social cohesion as a result of negative events (Míka 2009) |
Public policy | The social risk represents the probability for a person to be affected by an unexpected, uncertain situation (unemployment, debts, family disintegration) associated with loss of control over one’s personal actions (Sirovatka, Winkler 2010) |