Hazards, Disasters, and Society
(Sociology 4037/5037)
Readings
- Quarantelli, “Disaster Studies: An Analysis of the Social Historical Factors Affecting the Development of Research in the Area"
- Tierney, “From the Margins to the Mainstream? Disaster Research at the Crossroads”
- Cutter, Boruff, Bryan, and Lynn, “Social Vulnerability to Environmental Hazards”
- Cutter and Emrich, “Moral Hazard, Social Catastrophe: The Changing Face of Vulnerability along the Hurricane Coasts”
- Freudenburg, et al. “Katrina: Unlearned Lessons”
- Sorensen and Sorensen, “Community Processes: Warning and Evacuation”
- Clarke, “Panic: Myth or Reality?”
- “Research on Disaster Response and Recovery”
- Perry and Lindell, “Disaster Response”
- Rodriguez, Trainor, and Quarantelli, “Rising to the Challenges of a Catastrophe”
- Tierney, “Social Inequality, Hazards, and Disasters”
- Enarson, Fothergill, and Peek, “Gender and Disaster: Foundations and Directions”
- Bolin, “Race, Class, Ethnicity, and Disaster Vulnerability”
- Enarson, “Identifying and Addressing Social Vulnerabilities"
- Fothergill and Peek, “Surviving Disaster: A Study of Children in Hurricane Katrina”
- Potter, “Reframing Crime in a Disaster”
- Cooper and Block, “The Undodged Bullet”
- Tierney, Bevc, and Kuligowski, “Metaphors Matter”
- Tierney and Bevc, “Disaster as War”
- Dynes and Rodriguez, “Finding and Framing Katrina: The Social Construction of Disaster”
- Miles and Austin, “The Color(s) of Crisis: How Race, Rumor, and Collective Memory Shape the Legacy of Katrina”
- Rubin, “Local Emergency Management: Origins and Evolution”
- “Societal Changes Influencing the Context of Research”
- Rubin, “Focusing Events in the Early Twentieth Century”
- McEntire, “The Intergovernmental Context"
- Waugh, “Terrorism as Disaster”
- Harrald, “Emergency Management Restructured: Intended and Unintended Outcomes of Actions Taken Since 9-11”
- Waugh, “Local Emergency Management in the Post 9/11 World”