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ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH ON HAZARDS AND DISASTERS

788

Citations

68

References

1996

Year

Abstract

▪ Abstract Recent perspectives in anthropological research define a disaster as a process/event involving the combination of a potentially destructive agent(s) from the natural and/or technological environment and a population in a socially and technologically produced condition of vulnerability. From this basic understanding three general topical areas have developed: (a) a behavioral and organizational response approach, (b) a social change approach, and (c) a political economic/environmental approach, focusing on the historical-structural dimensions of vulnerability to hazards, particularly in the developing world. Applied anthropological contributions to disaster management are discussed as well as research on perception and assessment of hazard risk. The article closes with a discussion of potentials in hazard and disaster research for theory building in anthropology, particularly in issues of human-environment relations and sociocultural change.

References

YearCitations

1923

2.7K

1983

1.7K

1987

327

1992

303

1991

283

1993

222

1987

220

1980

218

1991

213

1993

185

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