Controlling disasters: recognising latent goals after Hurricane Katrina.

Classic sociological theory can be used to interpret the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall in the United States on 29 August 2005. The delayed and ineffective response to the storm and the subsequent failure of the levees become more understandable when one considers the latent goals of social control in disaster recovery. Constructing the survivors as suspect or criminal and conceptualising the impacts of the disaster as individual problems occurred in order to justify the emphasis on controlling the survivors of Katrina rather than on assisting them. Parallels are drawn here between the disaster response featuring social control efforts and a recent paradigmatic shift in criminal justice from justice to 'risk management'. Recognition of the implicit aims of the inadequate disaster response provides a more complete explanation of why post-Katrina efforts failed to achieve the manifest goals of response and recovery. The conclusion suggests ways to ensure more equitable and just disaster responses.

[1]  William R. Freudenburg,et al.  RESEARCH IN SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND PUBLIC POLICY , 1999 .

[2]  Kathleen Tierney,et al.  DISASTER BELIEFS AND INSTITUTIONAL INTERESTS: RECYCLING DISASTER MYTHS IN THE AFTERMATH OF 9–11 , 2003 .

[3]  Jeffrey A. Groen,et al.  Hurricane Katrina Evacuees: Who They Are, Where They Are, and How They Are Faring , 2008 .

[4]  R. Merton Social Theory and Social Structure , 1958 .

[5]  Lee Clarke,et al.  Terrorism and disaster : new threats, new ideas , 2003 .

[6]  C. Mills The Sociological Imagination , 1959 .

[7]  Gail Garfield Hurricane Katrina: The Making of Unworthy Disaster Victims , 2007 .

[8]  E. Mizruchi,et al.  Regulating Society: Beguines, Bohemians, and Other Marginals , 1987 .

[9]  Eric Klinenberg,et al.  Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago , 2002 .

[10]  L. M. Miller,et al.  Collective Disaster Responses to Katrina And Rita: Exploring Therapeutic Community, Social Capital and Social Control , 2007 .

[11]  Matt A. Mayer Updates to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Fiscal Year 2005 Transit Security Grant Program Guidelines and Application Kit , 2005 .

[12]  T. Pyrch,et al.  The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism , 2010 .

[13]  Lee Clarke,et al.  Panic: Myth or Reality? , 2002 .

[14]  Alice Fothergill Heads above Water , 2004 .

[15]  中井 駿二 The Christian Science Monitor , 1959 .

[16]  Gail A. Herndon The chronicle of higher education , 1977 .

[17]  Derek S. Reiners Lessons of Disaster: Policy Change after Catastrophic Events , 2007, Perspectives on Politics.

[18]  J. Reiman,et al.  The rich get richer and the poor get prison , 1979 .

[19]  Ronald J. Waldman,et al.  Evacuated Populations — Lessons from Foreign Refugee Crises , 2005 .

[20]  David L. Altheide Creating Fear: News and the Construction of Crisis , 2002 .

[21]  Michael Poon Plenary address. , 2008, Journal of cardiovascular computed tomography.

[22]  M. Betz,et al.  Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare. , 1972 .

[23]  K. Tierney,et al.  Metaphors Matter: Disaster Myths, Media Frames, and Their Consequences in Hurricane Katrina , 2006 .

[24]  Walter Gillis Peacock,et al.  Hurricane Andrew Ethnicity, Gender, and the Sociology of Disasters , 1997 .

[25]  David Alexander,et al.  Symbolic and practical interpretations of the Hurricane Katrina disaster in New Orleans , 2006 .

[26]  Kathleen J. Tierney,et al.  Disaster as war: Militarism and the social construction of disaster in New Orleans , 2006 .

[27]  P. Berger,et al.  The Social Construction of Reality , 1966 .

[28]  William E. Lovekamp The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe , 2008 .

[29]  Kevin Stenson,et al.  Crime, risk and justice : the politics of crime control in liberal democracies , 2001 .

[30]  Russell R. Dynes,et al.  Response to Disaster: Fact Versus Fiction and Its Perpetuation, The Sociology of Disaster.By Henry W. Fischer, III. University of America, 1994. 160 pp. Cloth, $46.50; paper, $18.50 , 1995 .

[31]  D. Mileti Disasters by Design: A Reassessment of Natural Hazards in the United States , 1999 .

[32]  John Fossey,et al.  Heads above water , 2010 .

[33]  Paul V. Stock KATRINA AND ANARCHY: A CONTENT ANALYSIS OF A NEW DISASTER MYTH , 2007 .

[34]  Henry W. Fischer Response to Disaster: Fact Versus Fiction & Its Perpetuation -The Sociology of Disaster- , 1998 .

[35]  Bob Bolin,et al.  Race, Class, Ethnicity, and Disaster Vulnerability , 2007 .

[36]  G. Sjoberg,et al.  The Corporate Control Industry and Human Rights: The Case of Iraq , 2005 .

[37]  C. Perrow Disasters Ever More? Reducing U.S. Vulnerabilities , 2007 .