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recovery
"Trading
Sites - Destroyed, Revealed, Restored"
Daniel Beunza, Business, New York University, and David
Stark, Sociology and International Affairs, Columbia University
and Santa Fe Institute
"Violence and Translation"
Veena Das, Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University
"Insurance and
Safety After September 11: Has the World Become a "Riskier"
Place?"
Robin M. Hogarth, Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu
Fabra
"The U.S. Bombing
of Afghanistan: A Women-Centered Perspective"
Saba Gul Khattak, Research Fellow, Sustainable Development
Policy Institute, Pakistan
"Muslims in the West: A Positive Asset"
Tariq Modood, Sociology, University of Bristol
"Memorializing Absence"
Marita Sturken, Communications, University of Southern California
"Strength of
a City: A Disaster Research Perspective on the World Trade
Center Attack"
Kathleen Tierney, Sociology, University of Delaware
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Terrorism and
Democratic Virtues
Competing
Narratives
New
War?
New World Order?
Building
Peace
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Strength of a City: A Disaster Research Perspective
on the World Trade Center Attack
Kathleen J. Tierney, Director
of the Disaster Research Center and Professor of Sociology
and Criminal Justice, University of Delaware
The September 11 attacks and their aftermath are a living
laboratory for those wishing to better understand how individuals,
groups, and organizations respond under extreme disaster conditions.
Along with other major disaster events, September 11 revealed
much about institutional responses and collective behavior
in crises, underscoring what is already known about the social
processes that characterize such events, while at the same
time highlighting aspects of disasters that the literature
has yet to explore fully.
The Response to the Attacks: Adaptive
and Effective
Focusing on New York City as the site of the greatest carnage,
destruction, and social disruption and the most complex organized
response, much of what was observed on September 11 and in
the days and weeks that followed constituted almost a textbook
case for the disaster research field. Beginning when the first
plane struck, as the disaster literature would predict, the
initial response was dominated by prosocial and adaptive behavior.
The rapid, orderly, and effective evacuation of the immediate
impact area - a response that was initiated and managed largely
by evacuees themselves, with a virtual absence of panic -
saved numerous lives. Assisted by emergency workers, occupants
of the World Trade Center and people in the surrounding area
helped one another to safety, even at great risk to themselves.
In contrast with popular culture and media images that depict
evacuations as involving highly competitive behavior, the
evacuation process had much in common with those that occur
in most major emergencies. Social bonds remained intact, and
evacuees were supportive of one another even under extremely
high-threat conditions. Prior experience with the 1993 Trade
Center bombing had led to significant learning among organizational
tenants and occupants of the Towers, and planning and training
contributed to their ability to respond in an adaptive fashion
to highly ambiguous and threatening conditions.
With respect to the organizational response, even though the
facility that constituted the central node in the City's emergency
management coordination system, the Emergency Operations Center
(EOC) at 7 World Trade Center, had to be evacuated following
the attack and collapsed in late afternoon on September 11,
both the management and the conduct of emergency response
activities continued uninterrupted through the most intense
phase of the crisis. Having lost a technology-rich, state-of-the
art facility, experiencing very significant communications
disruptions, and facing a massive tragedy unforeseen even
in their worst-case plans, response organizations in New York
City were highly resilient, showing great capacity to mobilize
and coordinate resources.
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The effective management of the initial emergency
response was a major accomplishment for the organizations
involved, particularly given the suddenness, severity, and
highly unexpected nature of the September 11 attacks. Most
US disasters are well-managed, but most US communities have
never had to face events on the scale of the 9-11 tragedy
in New York. Indeed, some large metropolitan areas have shown
themselves to be deficient in response capability in other
major crises, as evidenced by the mismanagement of the Los
Angeles riots and Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and the inability
of the city of Seattle to cope with anti-World Trade Organization
demonstrations in 1999. In each of those cases, the communities
in question had at least some forewarning of significant impending
problems and yet were unable to mobilize effectively when
those problems materialized. How and why New York was able
to cope so well on September 11 is an important topic for
future research, but insights can be gleaned both from the
disaster literature as well as from research by scholars such
as Karl Weick and Gene Rochlin, whose work focuses on factors
that contribute to organizational resilience in crisis situations.
Improvisation, Emergence, and Convergence
In drawing lessons from the New York disaster, it is important
to note that while the response activities undertaken by official
emergency agencies were crucial, those activities constituted
only part of the picture. Equally significant was the manner
in which those agencies interacted with and obtained support
from non-crisis organizations and from residents of the impact
area. September 11 also demonstrates how planned and emergent
action blend in disaster settings. It has long been recognized
that disasters represent occasions in which the boundaries
between organizational and collective behavior are blurred.
As disasters become larger and more complex, routinized organizational
roles and even disaster plans give way to improvisation, as
it becomes increasingly evident that those earlier expectations
and guidelines no longer apply. The responsibilities of designated
crisis-relevant organizations such as emergency medical service
providers may be taken over by community residents for periods
of time, while new groups emerge to carry out other newly
defined tasks. Local capabilities are enhanced through the
active involvement of organizations from outside the impact
area and of spontaneous volunteers. In the World Trade Center
disaster, all these organizational patterns could be observed
at Ground Zero and at other key sites in the immediate aftermath
of the attack: NYC emergency response organizations were assisted
by counterpart organizations from throughout the tri-state
region and ultimately from communities around the country,
by private organizations offering whatever help they could,
and by countless volunteer groups that emerged spontaneously
to assist with search and rescue and the provision of support
services to emergency workers.
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Click
here
for a report on the 1992 Los Angeles riots, and here
for an assesment of Hurricane Andrew
Click here
for the text of Gene Rochlin's book "Trapped in the Net:
The Unanticipated Consequences of Computerization" |
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For nearly fifty years, disaster scholars
have documented and analyzed the phenomenon of disaster-related
convergence - that is, collective behavior involving the mass
movement of people, goods, and other resources into disaster-stricken
areas. Convergence stems primarily from emergent definitions
that call for altruistic responses and also from a collectively-felt
need to provide assistance and solace to the victims of disasters.
Both beneficial and problematic, convergence brings needed
volunteers and resources to disaster-stricken areas while
simultaneously creating substantial management challenges.
Like the earthquake that struck Kobe, Japan in 1995 and like
other major natural disasters in the US and worldwide, the
Trade Center attack became an occasion for large-scale convergence
behavior, with both the benefits and the problems convergence
creates. Tens of thousands in the immediate impact region
took part in vigils of remembrance at fire houses and other
sites, performed emergency-related tasks, and formed an astonishing
array of support groups to assist and complement the activities
of formal disaster response and relief agencies. Hundreds
of thousands donated money and goods. And as is typical in
major disasters, material donations following the September
11 attack included both things that were urgently needed and
goods that were of no conceivable use, creating massive logistical
and storage challenges for hard-pressed local agencies.
This meshing of prior learning, planning and improvisation
and this diverse panoply of organized and collective action
enabled the City of New York to manage the Trade Center disaster.
Effective responses to community crises often look messy from
the outside, but that is part of what makes them effective.
The failure to understand the emergence and complexity that
is typical of major disasters often results in characterizations
of disaster settings as chaotic and unorganized. Critical
observers may express exasperation because "no one is in charge"
- as if the activities of hundreds of organizations, thousands
of small groups, and tens of thousands of individuals should
be controlled in real-time by some single individual or overarching
entity. These kinds of comments are often rooted in inappropriate
militaristic command-and-control images of disaster management
and in a mistrust of non-elites and non-experts. All such
criticisms fail to appreciate the strengths of situationally-driven,
problem-focused, locally-based, and improvisational response
strategies like those observed in New York on September 11
and in the days that followed.
Collaboration, Social Divisions, and Conflict
The Trade Center disaster also illustrates how in disaster
settings high levels of cooperation and collaboration among
organizational and community actors can co-exist with societal
divisions and conflicts. Disasters are commonly depicted in
the literature as "consensus crises" that can be distinguished
from wars, civil conflicts, and riots due to the high levels
of cooperation and community-wide altruism they engender.
Communities responding to disasters are seen as coping with
collectively-shared pain, loss, and disruption and as temporarily
suspending ongoing conflicts and disagreements in the interest
of meeting urgent needs and beginning the recovery process.
This was the predominant response to the Trade Center attack,
particularly during the first few days. At the same time,
however, like other disaster events, September 11 exposed
differential vulnerabilities and community fault lines and
gave rise to competing and often conflicting disaster framing
processes. With few exceptions, poor and marginalized victims
of the Trade Tower attack remained as invisible in death as
they had in life. After September 11, the city and the nation
seemed to rediscover the underpaid and under-appreciated public
safety and municipal employees whose labor makes urban life
possible. However, now that the immediate crisis has passed,
those lauded as heroes will likely find it difficult to obtain
the financial compensation they deserve. Soon after September
11, conflicts emerged between public safety workers and their
families, who insisted on the need to continue the careful
and deliberate search for victims and bodies, and city and
other governmental agencies wishing to move clean-up and recovery
efforts forward as rapidly as possible so as to lesson the
negative economic impacts of the attack.
In the weeks following September 11, the barriers erected
to prevent public access to Ground Zero became lines of demarcation
between the recovery workers on the inside, who collectively
defined the impact area as sacred ground, and the sightseers
and purveyors of disaster kitsch on the perimeter, who converged
to pay their respects, take advantage of photo opportunities,
or turn a quick profit on the event. New Yorkers and people
across the nation learned what residents of the San Francisco
Bay Area discovered (and loudly denounced) after the 1989
Loma Prieta earthquake: that when the Red Cross solicits donations
for victims following major disasters, those funds may in
fact be expended anywhere, despite what contributors may have
intended. Groups representing victims of the Trade Center
attack have emerged to protest the conduct of disaster relief
and recovery efforts and to press compensation-related claims.
As these examples show, in addition to bringing community
commitment and involvement to new levels, disasters can also
constitute occasions for conflict and contentious collective
action.
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Click
here
for the Chronicle of Philanthropy's running tally of money raised
for September 11th victims |
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Similarly, the recovery period following
damaging disasters is often marked by conflicts over the
recovery process - for example, debates concerning whether
a disaster-stricken community should be restored consistent
with pre-disaster development patterns or rebuilt in ways
consistent with new community visions. Because of the savagery
and immense cultural significance of the September 11 attacks,
the deep wounds they have caused among survivors, and the
enormous economic interests at stake, controversies surrounding
reconstruction and recovery planning are certain to be even
more heated and protracted than they typically have been
after other major disaster events.
September 11 and US Disaster Policy
The handling of the Trade Center disaster also offers more
general insights on the nation's policy with respect to
future events. Domestic crisis management efforts in US
society have been marked by tensions and shifts in emphasis
between war planning - particularly plans for nuclear war
- and efforts to manage natural and technological disasters.
Over the past five decades, "civil defense," fallout shelters,
and nuclear crisis relocation planning have gradually given
way to policies and programs that focus on enhancing the
ability of US communities to better respond when disasters
strike and to reduce losses through improved pre-event mitigation
and planning. The end of the Cold War and the dissolution
of the Soviet Union gave further impetus to this policy
shift. However, those same changes also sent some elements
within the military and defense establishment on a search
for new missions. After what was widely acknowledged as
an inadequate governmental response to Hurricane Andrew
in 1992, discussions began on whether the military should
have a greater role in disaster response within the US.
Later, interest grew in applying intelligence- and defense-related
technologies to the management of both foreign and domestic
disasters.
Since September 11, as new agencies have been created in
an effort to prevent future terrorist attacks and improve
preparedness, domestic disaster management has once again
taken on a decidedly militaristic tone. The Trade Center
disaster was caused by the actions of terrorists, not by
a natural disaster agent, and its aftermath blended elements
of natural disaster, crime scene, and national security
emergency - subsequently followed by an anthrax-generated
public health emergency. If the past is any indication,
domestic security proponents will argue that such highly-complex
crisis events need to be managed by military, quasi-military,
and law enforcement institutions and by centralized command-and-control
structures. However, the literature on community and organizational
response to disasters indicates that militarizing disasters
- even those brought about through terrorism - would be
taking precisely the wrong lesson from September 11. Indeed,
if the kinds of public response patterns outlined here are
ignored in planning for future crises, our society may find
itself less capable than before of coping with the next
major disaster - or terrorist attack. Rather than creating
new structures or assigning responsibility for protecting
US communities to defense-oriented or non-local institutions,
the appropriate strategy should be to continue to rely on
our current systems for managing disasters and other major
community emergencies, which have been shown to work well,
and, following New York's example, to pursue ways of effectively
incorporating volunteers, emergent groups, and a range of
civil-society institutions into crisis-management efforts.
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See
also on this site the essay by Sturken
on memorializing the September 11th attacks
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