Promoting Risk: Constructing the Earthquake Threat

Front Cover
Transaction Publishers, Jan 1, 1995 - Social Science - 248 pages

The risk of a future catastrophic earthquake has never achieved the level of public concern accorded to such issues as crime, health care, economic conditions, or even pornography. This lack of concern might be explained as a function of our inability to control the geophysical processes that produce earthquakes. Yet a sociological theory of risk questions such a direct connection between physical forces and social reality, because human beings, not nature, create beliefs about risks. This examination of one type of risk, the threat of future catastrophic earthquakes, concentrates for the first time on the individuals and actions that result in the creation of risk, that is, the risk promoters and the process of promoting risk. It uses social constructionist theory to study claims-makers, the claims-making process, and the outcome of claims-making activities.

 

Contents

The Earthquake Threat Reconsidered
5
The Significance of this Examination
14
PUBLIC ARENAS AND THE PROMOTION
67
State and Local Arenas
84
Public Television Documentaries about
93
Summary
100
CHANGING TYPIFICATIONS OF
109
Domain Elaboration
116
THE SOCIAL ORGANIZATION OF CLAIMSMAKING
147
EXPLAINING THE CAREER OF
175
SocialScience Theory and the Career
183
Conclusion
189
THE EARTHQUAKE THREAT
193
POSTSCRIPT
211
APPENDIX
217
REFERENCES
227

Domain Expansion
123
Retypification
132
Conclusion
140

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Page 1 - The most casual observation and reflection shows clearly that the recognition by a society of its social problems is a highly selective process, with many harmful social conditions and arrangements not even making a bid for attention and with others falling by the wayside in what is frequently a fierce competitive struggle.

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