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Item Looting in Civil Disorders: An Index of Social Change(Sage Publications LTD, 1968-03) Quarantelli, E. L.; Dynes, Russell R.Item What Looting in Civil Disturbances Really Means(Washington University in St. Louis, 1968-05) Dynes, Russell R.; Quarantelli, E. L.Item Methodology of Studying Disasters(SAGE Publications Limited, 1970) Drabek, Thomas E.Item Editors' Introduction(SAGE Publications Limited, 1970) Quarantelli, E. L.; Dynes, Russell R.Item People's Reactions To Emergency Warnings(1983-08) Quarantelli, E. L.Item Blame Assignment in a Diffuse Disaster Situation: A Case Example of the Role of an Emergent Citizen Group(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1984-08) Neal, David M.Blame occurs frequently after disaster, yet, the process of blame is a neglected topic of disaster research. Our study looks at how a grassroots citizen's group blamed a local company for air pollution and health problems. The blaming process directed toward the company aided in the mobilization of the citizen's group but also prevented any immediate issue-oriented actions. As blame directed toward the company decreased within the group, solidarity within the group decreased. Yet, as blame decreased within the group, issue-oriented actions by the group increased. The placement of blame by the group had both positive and negative consequences for their goals. Comparing this case with other studies of blame in disaster, we found: 1) placing blame does not lead to structural changes in the social system, 2) organizations can be the focus of blame, and 3) only one target of blame can exist. In addition, we suggest that the type of disaster (diffuse or focalized, and technological or natural) may have an impact upon who or what becomes the target of blame.Item What Is Disaster? The Need For Clarification In Definition And Conceptualization In Research(1985) Quarantelli, E. L.Item Community Response To Disasters(1985) Quarantelli, E. L.; Dynes, Russell R.Item Social Support Systems: Some Behavioral Patterns In The Context Of Mass Evacuation Activities(1985) Quarantelli, E. L.Item Role Simplification In Disaster(1986) Dynes, Russell R.; Quarantelli, E. L.Item Local and National Media Coverage of Disaster: A Content Analysis of the Print Media's Treatment of Disaster Myths(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1986-11) Wenger, Dennis; Friedman, BarbaraBased on newspaper coverage for four disasters-two within the U.S.A., one in Algeria, and one in Italy - Goltz (1984) concluded that generally the media do not present images of maladaptive behavior or disaster myths. This article reexamines Goltz's findings, presents additional relevant data from media coverage of Hurricane Alicia and dissects several important methodological issues. Our conclusion is a counterpoint observation that the mass communication system does contain mythical elements.Item What Should We Study? Questions and Suggestions for Researchers About the Concept of Disasters(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1987-03) Quarantelli, E. L.Item Disaster Studies: An Analysis of the Social Historical Factors Affecting the Development of Research in the Area(1987-11) Quarantelli, E. L.Almost nothing has been written about the social historical emergence and development of social and behavioral research on disasters. This paper provides a description and a sociology of scientific knowledge analysis of the factors affecting the initiation of studies in the area in the United States. First, we note how disaster research on group and behavioral aspects of disasters had their roots, almost exclusively, in rather narrowly focused applied questions or practical concerns. Second, we point out how this led to certain kinds of selective emphases in terms of what and how the research was undertaken in the pioneering days, but with substantive consequences which we still see operative today.Item Cross-Cultural International Research: Sociology and Disaster(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1988-08) Dynes, Russell R.Early cross-cultural studies of disaster responses are summarized to provide a context for recent collaborative efforts. Many of these have been initiated by researchers from the United States who have joined colleagues in numerous other countries to standardize measurement instruments and assess aspects of the public response. These efforts have highlighted definitional, theoretical, and methodological difficulties which are being addressed in current studies. Finally, current policy developments are described that may encourage future research that is cross-societal in focus and collaborative in implementation.Item The NORC Research on the Arkansas Tornado: A Fountainhead Study(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1988-11) Quarantelli, E. L.In this review and analysis of the research effort in the disaster area by NORC [National Opinion Research Center] we shall present: (1) the general background of the work; (2)the nature of the field research undertaken; (3) a selective summary of the substantive focus and findings from the largest single field study within the NORC work, namely on the Arkansas tornado; (4) a brief overall assessment of the research done, and (5) some of the important consequences of what NORC did in the disaster area.Item Improving Theory and Research on Hazard Mitigation: Political Economy and Organizational Perspectives(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1989-11) Tierney, Kathleen J.This paper opens with a discussion of the progress that has been made to date in research and theory on mitigation. It goes on to suggest approaches that, by addressing neglected aspects of mitigation-related issues, may improve our understanding of the topic. Woven through the paper are calls for several shifts in emphasis with respect to studies on mitigation: (1) from a social system, consensus model to a conflict model on society and community; (2) from an event-based, discontinuous concept of disaster and mitigation to a view that stresses the continuity between ongoing social life and the disruption occasioned by natural and technological agents; (3) from the study of the social consequences of disasters to the study of aspects of the social order that increase risk and lead to disasters; and (4) from an individualistic, social psychological approach to mitigation to a perspective that takes into account macrolevel social phenomena.Item Conceptualizing Disasters from a Sociological Perspective(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1989-11) Quarantelli, E. L.Item A Methodology For Assessing The Risk Of Hazardous Materials Release Following Earthquakes - A Demonstration Study For The Los Angeles Area(1992) Seligson, Hope; Eguchi, Ronald; Tierney, Kathleen J.A methodology for estimating the risk of earthquake induced hazardous materials releases was developed for the National Science Foundation and the National Center for Earthquake Engineering Research. Seismic hazard analyses, fragility modeling for facilities handling hazardous materials and data on airborne materials releases were used in the development of the methodology. The risk was estimated in terms of population within the study area exposed to hazardous materials as a result of a postulated earthquake event. The procedure was developed to be used as a tool by communities interested in regional hazard management. In order to demonstrate the methodology, Los Angeles County was selected as a study area. Population data was integrated into the methodology to predict the population exposure to hazardous materials releases for three earthquake scenarios: a Magnitude 8+ event on the San Andreas fault, a Magnitude 7 event on the Newport- Inglewood fault, and a Magnitude 5.9 simulation of the 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake.Item Converting Disaster Scholarship into Effective Disaster Planning and Managing: Possibilities and Limitations(Research Committee on Disasters, International Sociological Association, 1993-03) Quarantelli, E. L.I have spent most of my professional life since the 1950s doing research on the social aspects of disasters. This social science research in which I have participated, is of course part of a much larger body of studies undertaken in the last 40 years, could be characterized in a whole variety of ways as to findings, motifs, implications, uses, etc. But there is one theme that runs through the bulk of the work that has been done up to now: according to research findings much of what is generally believed about disaster related individual and group behavior is not true or correct. As I and others have phrased it, we are embedded in a great number of misconceptions or myths about behavior in disasters. This disaster mythology clearly does not make for effective planning for or managing of such crisis occasions.Item Community Emergency Planning: False Assumptions and Inappropriate Analogies(International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 1994) Dynes, Russell R.Community emergency planning had its roots in military analogies which viewed emergencies as extensions of "enemy attack" scenarios. Such thinking was embedded in early structural arrangements and was generalized as the appropriate normative model for all emergencies. This model viewed emergencies as conditions of social chaos which could be rectified by command and control. It is argued here that such a view is inadequate based on a knowledge of behavior in emergencies and the model is dysfunctional for planning. A more adequate model is presented, based on conditions of continuity, coordination and cooperation. This problem solving model, based on research rather than military analogies, provides a more adequate set of assumptions as the basis for planning. However, legislative and technological "improvements" often make emergency planning more rigid and increasingly inadequate.