Human Behavior in the Mexico City Earthquake: Some Implications from Basic Themes in Survey Findings

Author(s)Quarantelli, E. L.
Date Accessioned2005-03-07T23:54:18Z
Date Available2005-03-07T23:54:18Z
Publication Date1989
DescriptionIn September 1985 a major earthquake hit Mexico, especially its capital city. In the metropolitan area of Mexico City thousands of persons were killed and tens of thousands were injured. At least a hundred thousand building units, mostly residential ones, were damaged in some way. Hundreds of thousands of the population were rendered homeless. Material and property losses amounted to billions of dollars. Most of the important federal governmental buildings, many financial and industrial offices, key communication centers, and the largest central district hotels were in the major impacted zones. In addition, 30 percent of hospital beds in the city were lost as well as 22 percent of school facilities, and more than 10,000 shops and factories were affected. Obviously all this considerably disrupted everyday life in the largest urban complex in the world. Thus, what happened by an criteria was a major disaster although perhaps not a catastrophic one given the population base and community resources involved (e.g., the residents in the metropolitan area number over 20,000,000 and the directly affected neighborhoods amounted to only 3.2 percent of the whole federal district).en
SponsorNational Science Foundationen
Extent248423 bytes
MIME typeapplication/pdf
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/509
Languageen_US
PublisherDisaster Research Centeren
Part of SeriesPreliminary Papers;137
KeywordsMexico Cityen
Keywordsearthquakeen
Keywordshuman behavioren
TitleHuman Behavior in the Mexico City Earthquake: Some Implications from Basic Themes in Survey Findingsen
TypeOtheren
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