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The phenomenology of panic Discourse and experience in survivors accounts of mass emergencies Chris Cocking & John Drury University of Sussex – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20phenomenology%20of%20


1
The phenomenology of panic
  • Discourse and experience in survivors accounts
    of mass emergencies
  • Chris Cocking John Drury
  • University of Sussex
  • cpc20_at_sussex.ac.uk
  • 11/9/2006

2
Outline
  • The concept of Panic in mass emergencies
  • Hillsborough football disaster
  • July 7th 2005 bombings
  • Conclusions/implications

3
The Panic Model
  • Part of the irrationalist tradition, drawing from
    Le Bon (1896) The crowd
  • Reflected in popular discourse
  • a) Threat causes emotion to overwhelm reason
  • b) Collective identity breaks down
  • c) Selfish behaviour- pushing trampling etc
  • d) Contagion-these acts spread to whole crowd

4
The self-categorisation approach
  • Derives from Turners Self-Categorisation Theory
    (SCT), and Tajfels Social Identity Theory (SIT)
  • Disasters can create a common identity- Furedi
    (2004) or sense of we-ness- Clarke (2001),
  • This common identity can result in orderly,
    altruistic behaviour as people escape common
    threat
  • Increased threat can enhance common identity
  • Evidence so far supports SCT approach

5
Hillsborough football disaster
  • FA Cup semi-final 1989
  • 96 Liverpool fans died in crush
  • Mismanagement of crowd to blame, but claims of
    crowd trouble by some-anger still exists to this
    day
  • IPA done on interviews with 3 survivors to look
    at concept of panic

6
  • I dont think people did lose control of their
    emotions and I think the restraint shown
    should be source of great pride to those people
    they were clearly in control of their own
    emotions and their own physical insecurity, I
    mean youre being pushed, youre being crushed
    when youre hot and bothered, youre beginning to
    fear for your own personal safety, and yet they
    were controlling or tempering their
    emotions to help try and remedy the situation and
    help others who were clearly struggling

7
  • one didnt have the capacity physically to
    panic. You couldnt move, so panic became things
    like breathlessness.. people losing consciousness
    but thats really a physical degree of I
    have to say that two people that struck me as
    panicking most were those police officers and it
    really was discomforting particularly because
    one of them was on a horse and when youre on a
    horse you have a vantage point because you can
    see whats happening and when youre also looking
    at someone ten feet away and theyre panicking
    because of what they can see and you cant see it

8
panic as gloss?
  • once blind panic has set in I would think that
    was that was the main part every everyone really
    panicked- sheer panic the police panicked the
    crowd panicked everyone panicked

9
Panic or survival?
  • I would never ever consider stepping on a
    dead body. I did that to save myself because I
    panicked I thought to myself look Im either
    going to step on he or she to get out of this
    and live or die. The choice was that simple. I
    hope that would be an example of panic because I
    was certainly panicked

10
Co-operation when possible
  • when people got over the fence they tried to
    pull people out. I had a grip on this person
    I distinctively remember trying to pull him out
    but the crowd had a vicelike grip on him it was
    next to impossible but everyone would have
    tried anything possible you know they pulled all
    the hoardings down and made temporary stretchers
    for people to take them over to the mortuary. the
    fans were fantastic

11
Denial of Panic
  • I cant think of any examples no I can see
    people wandering dazed but I cant see in my
    images anyone doing irrational you know people
    can say well I panicked and I had to get out but
    thats rational behaviour thats not panic
    behaviour, so no not in the classical mythical
    sense

12
July 7th 2005
  • 8 interviews analysed so far
  • 7/8 make spontaneous references to panic in some
    degree
  • But when asked directly, 7/8 deny that there was
    mass panic

13
  • there might have been some panic with the people
    who were hyperventilating so I probably only
    saw 1 or 2 people hyperventilating but in terms
    of trying to smash windows open it was all
    controlled it was one window that was smashed it
    was to help other people there werent people
    trying to open up hatches on their own. there
    were people trying to let fresh air in, but there
    was no-one trying to like run out of the train on
    their own in a mad panic

14
Denial of panic
  • Int ok so do you think anybody panicked from
    what you saw
  • LB5 I think people remained calm, people were
    upset but they didnt, I didnt see anyone
    panicking rushing round tearing round shouting

15
Vocal panic?
  • LB7 quite a lot of people probably panicked when
    it first happened, yeah
  • Int and can you remember what they were doing
    that made you think that they were panicking?
  • LB7 um screaming really loudly yeah

16
  • Int is this something you can put on a scale of
    1-10 of how calm you think the general mood was?
  •  LB7 in the first sort of few seconds after it
    um I guess overall so if 1 is calm and 10 is not
    calm, yeah, um probably around 8/9 because there
    were a lot of people really hysterical but then
    some people were still in control, but then by
    the time I had got out and could walk around
    everything seemed quite calm. I dont know say
    5 or something because it was still a really
    crazy situation and stuff but people were
    relatively calm

17
Why is the p word used so often ?
  • Quite liberal use of the term panic in our data
  • But this usage doesnt always stand up to
    scrutiny, and accounts are often qualified or
    contradictory
  • Often used to contrast panicked behaviour of
    individuals with crowd as a whole
  • Reflects general mistrust of the crowd by some
    groups in society?

18
Summary
  • Panic is often used to describe behaviour in mass
    emergencies
  • However the term is often a gloss that doesnt
    stand up to scrutiny
  • More than just semantics as emergency planning
    often based on fear of mass panic

19
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20
Any questions/ comments?
  • Do you have any experiences of the London
    bombings you are willing to share?
  • please visit www.cs.nott.ac.uk/dzs/londonbomb/ind
    ex.htm if you do
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