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'Catastrophic failure' theories and disaster journalism : evaluating media explanations of the Black Saturday bushfires

journal contribution
posted on 2010-11-01, 00:00 authored by A Burns, Benjamin Eltham
In recent decades, academic researchers of natural disasters and emergency management have developed a canonical literature on ‘catastrophe failure’ theories such as disaster responses from US emergency management services (Drabek, 2010; Quarantelli, 1998) and the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant (Perrow, 1999). This article examines six influential theories from this field in an attempt to explore why Victoria’s disaster and emergency management response systems failed during Australia’s Black Saturday bushfires. How well, if at all, are these theories understood by journalists, disaster and emergency management planners, and policy-makers? In examining the Country Fire Authority’s response to the fires, as well as the media’s reportage of them, we use the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires as a theory-testing case study of failures in emergency management, preparation and planning. We conclude that journalists can learn important lessons from academics’ specialist knowledge about disaster and emergency management responses.

History

Journal

Media international Australia, incorporating culture and policy

Issue

137

Pagination

90 - 99

Publisher

University of Queensland

Location

Nathan, Qld

ISSN

1329-878X

eISSN

2200-467X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

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