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The effects of risk perception and sense of place on disaster preparedness have been widely reported.However,most studies have only demonstrated weak relationships and it is unknown whether these are applicable to China.This study investigated such relationships in hazard-threatened areas of the Three Gorges Reservoir area in southwest China.Data were collected from 348 fanning households in landslide-prone areas.Binary logistic and Tobit regression models were constructed to determine whether risk perception and sense of place influence landslide preparedness.The results show that:(1) Farming households’ awareness of the need to prepare for disasters was relatively low,and disaster preparedness behaviors were mainly based on self-leing.Among the 348 sampled households,67% exhibited no disaster preparedness behavior,and only 2% adopted four of the five types of disaster preparedness behaviors.About a quarter of farming households consciously leed disaster-related knowledge.(2) Risk perception and sense of place had important influences on disaster preparedness.Respondents who received higher scores on the perception of the probability of a landslide,the threat of a landslide,and the place dependence variables were more likely to adopt a greater number of disaster preparedness behaviors.Respondents with higher scores on the perception of controllability in the case of a landslide were less likely to adopt a greater number of disaster preparedness behaviors.Additionally,individual and household socioeconomic characteristics--education,loss,distance from hazard site,information acquisition channel,and housing material—were all related to household disaster preparedness behavior.This study contributes to the current literature by improving the understanding of the relationships of risk perception and sense of place to disaster preparedness in farming households threatened by geological disasters in southwest China.