Disaster Research: An Entry For An Encyclopedia

Author(s)Quarantelli, E. L.
Date Accessioned2005-03-10T01:07:00Z
Date Available2005-03-10T01:07:00Z
Publication Date1991
DescriptionDescriptions of calamities go as far back as the earliest human writings, but systematic empirical studies and theoretical treatises on social aspects of disasters have appeared only in the 20th century. The first publications in both cases were produced by sociologists. Samuel Prince (1920) wrote a doctoral dissertation in sociology at Columbia University in 1920 which examined the social change consequences of a munitions ship explosion in the harbor of Halifax, Canada. Pitirim Sorokin (1942) two decades later wrote Man and Society in Calamity which mostly speculated on how war, revolution, famine, and pestilence might affect the mental processes, behavior, social organizational and cultural life of involved populations.en
Extent147955 bytes
MIME typeapplication/pdf
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/539
Languageen_US
PublisherDisaster Research Centeren
Part of SeriesPreliminary Papers;167
KeywordsDisasteren
Keywordscommunities
Keywordssociology
TitleDisaster Research: An Entry For An Encyclopediaen
TypeOtheren
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