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When disaster strikes, a ritual unfolds: a flood of experts,
bureaucrats, and analysts rush to the scene; personal tragedies are
played out in a barrage of media coverage; on the ground, confusion
and uncertainty reign. In this major comparative study, Gregory
Button draws on three decades of research on the most infamous
human and environmental calamities to break new ground in our
understanding of these moments of chaos. He explains how
corporations, state agencies, social advocacy organizations, and
other actors attempt to control disaster narratives, adopting
public relations strategies that may either downplay or amplify a
sense of uncertainty in order to advance political and policy
goals. Importantly, he shows that disasters are not isolated
events, offering a holistic account of the political dynamics of
uncertainty in times of calamity.
When disaster strikes, a ritual unfolds: a flood of experts,
bureaucrats, and analysts rush to the scene; personal tragedies are
played out in a barrage of media coverage; on the ground, confusion
and uncertainty reign. In this major comparative study, Gregory
Button draws on three decades of research on the most infamous
human and environmental calamities to break new ground in our
understanding of these moments of chaos. He explains how
corporations, state agencies, social advocacy organizations, and
other actors attempt to control disaster narratives, adopting
public relations strategies that may either downplay or amplify a
sense of uncertainty in order to advance political and policy
goals. Importantly, he shows that disasters are not isolated
events, offering a holistic account of the political dynamics of
uncertainty in times of calamity.
In Capitalizing on Catastrophe an international group of scholars
and professionals critically examine how local communities around
the world have prepared for and responded to recent cataclysms. The
book's principal focus is the increasing trend to rely on the
private sector to deal with natural disasters and other forms of
large-scale devastation, from hurricanes and tsunamis to civil wars
and industrial accidents. Called 'disaster capitalism' by its
critics, the tendency to contract private interests to solve
massive, urgent public problems may be inevitable but is extremely
problematic_especially with respect to peoples who need help the
most. Can private relief groups give the highest priority to
potential and actual victims of large disasters, for example, if
that means devoting fewer resources to protecting tourism and other
profitable industries? The high-profile contributors to this volume
straightforwardly tackle such timely and difficult questions of
great public concern.
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