Social scientists are available to
comment on the tragedy and the recovery process.
Social
scientists can comment on what is known about human and social relationships and
structures that could help prevent or mitigate the consequences of disasters,
dismiss common myths about disasters, analyze common mistakes in developing
responses to disasters, and explain the mismatch between citizens’ needs and
government and private industry responses. Sociologists can comment on how to
improve preparedness for, response to, and recovery from, human-made and natural
disasters.
Benigno E. Aguirre (302-831-0204 or aguirre@udel.edu)
is a Professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the
University of Delaware and a faculty member of the Disaster Research Center.
William A. Anderson (202-334-1523 or wanderson@nas.edu) is
associate executive director in the Division on Earth and Life Studies and
director of the Disasters Roundtable in the National Research Council. For more
than 20 years, he held various positions at NSF. While at NSF, his
responsibilities included developing multidisciplinary natural hazards research
programs and providing oversight for such large-scale research activities as the
NSF-funded earthquake engineering research centers.
Lee Clarke,
(732-445-5741 or lee@leeclarke.com) Associate Professor of Sociology at Rutgers
University, writes about organizations, culture, and disasters. His early work
concerned how decision makers choose among risks in highly uncertain
environments. His publications include:
Organizations, Uncertainties, and
Risk, edited by James F. Short, Jr. and Lee Clarke;
Acceptable Risk?
Making Decisions in a Toxic Environment;and
Terrorism and
Disaster: New Threats, New Ideas. He has written, and frequently lectures
about, organizational failures, leadership, terrorism, panic, civil defense,
evacuation, community response to disaster, organizational failure, and the
World Trade Center disaster. His work was recently profiled in the
New York
Times and the
Harvard Business Review. His latest book is
Worst
Cases: Imagining Terror and Calamity in the Modern Day.
Russell Dynes, (302-831-4202 or rdynes@udel.edu) is a
Research Professor and Founding Director of the University of Delaware Disaster
Research Center (DRC). Dynes is the author or editor of ten books, including
Organized Behavior in Disaster, Sociology of Disaster and Disasters,
Collective Behavior and Social Organization and well over 100 articles, many
on disaster related topics.
Elaine Enarson, (303.527.9987 or
eenarson@earthlink.net), Independent Scholar, is a disaster sociologist with a
women's studies focus. Her research and publications have documented the impacts
of hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes on women with attention to violence
against women, women's work in disasters, and the proactive mobilization of
women and women's organizations in disasters. She is the co-editor of
The
Gendered Terrain of Disasters, lead author of the FEMA online course on
social vulnerability to disasters, and a founding member of the "Gender and
Disaster Network."
Kai Erikson, (203-432-3326 or
kai.erikson@yale.edu) Professor Emeritus at Yale University, is an authority on
the social consequences of catastrophic events. He won major awards from the ASA
for his books
Wayward Puritans: A Study in the Sociology of Deviance
and
Everything In Its Path. He is the author of
A New Species of
Trouble: Explorations in Disaster, Trauma, and Community. His research
interests include American communities, human disasters, and ethnonational
conflict. According to Erikson, what happens after a disaster is often at least
as traumatic as the primary event itself. He has studied disasters such as the
Buffalo Creek flood in West Virginia (1972), the Three Mile Island nuclear
accident (1979), and the Exxon Valdez oil spill (1989). In addition to examining
the long-term consequences of these events, Erikson has been active in efforts
to secure compensation for the victims. He has been profiled in the New York
Times, the New Yorker, the Washington Post, NPR, and PBS.
Dennis
Mileti, (303-492-6818) is Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology
and Emeritus Director of the Natural Hazards Research Applications and
Information Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is the author of
over 100 publications. Most of these focus on the societal aspects of mitigation
and preparedness for hazards and disasters. His Book,
Disasters by Design
(1999), involved over 130 experts to assess knowledge, research, and policy
needs for hazards in the United States.
Walter Gillis Peacock,
(979-945-7853 or peacock@tamu.edu) is Director of the Hazards Reduction and
Recovery Center and at Texas A&M University (TAMU). He is a professor of
urban planning at TAMU. His research focuses on natural hazards and human
systems response to hazards and disasters with an emphasis on social
vulnerability, evacuation, and the socio-political ecology of long-term recovery
and mitigation. His articles have appeared in a variety of journals including
American Sociological Review,
Natural Hazards Review, and the
International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters. He has published
two books on natural disasters. His latest coauthored book is
Hurricane
Andrew: Ethnicity, Gender and the Sociology of Disaster.
For more
information, contact Sujata Sinha at 202-247-9871 or via email at
ssinha@asanet.org.