Social risk amplification as an attribution: the case of zoonotic disease outbreaks

被引:22
|
作者
Busby, Jerry [1 ]
Duckett, Dominic [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lancaster, Dept Management Sci, Bailrigg LA1 4YX, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
social risk amplification; zoonotic disease; focus groups; FOCUS GROUPS; COMMUNICATION; ATTENUATION; PERCEPTION; SARS;
D O I
10.1080/13669877.2012.670130
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Past work on social risk amplification has concentrated on studying large-scale, aggregated societal responses to risk issues as the outcome of social processes. An alternative approach, explored in this article, is to regard amplification as an attribution. Social risk amplification is something that social actors attribute to one another as they try to explain their systematic differences in response, not an objective characterisation of a response that is somehow disproportionate to its stimulus. This avoids the problem that the idea of a social amplification of risk can be taken to imply that a risk external to the social system can somehow be distorted by it. The attributional view also helps illustrate differences in risk response as much as commonalities. In order to explore risk amplification as an attribution we analyse the explanations and descriptions used by actors discussing recent outbreaks of zoonotic disease. We present a grounded analysis that produces a classification of these explanations and descriptions. It is evident from the cliches that informants used - such as 'crying wolf', 'scare-mongering' and 'jumping on the bandwagon' - that social actors have had a concept resembling social risk amplification that long predates the social amplification of risk framework. Moreover, they use it in a strongly normative way: sometimes saying this amplification is explicable and excusable, sometimes not. It is therefore a basis of social judgment. The idea of amplification as an attribution offers the particular advantage that it helps deal with situations where social actors develop their risk responses in reaction to the risk responses of other social actors.
引用
收藏
页码:1049 / 1074
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Expert risk perceptions and the social amplification of risk: A case study in invasive tree pests and diseases
    Urquhart, Julie
    Potter, Clive
    Barnett, Julie
    Fellenor, John
    Mumford, John
    Quine, Christopher P.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2017, 77 : 172 - 178
  • [32] A systematic review of spatial decision support systems in public health informatics supporting the identification of high risk areas for zoonotic disease outbreaks
    Rachel Beard
    Elizabeth Wentz
    Matthew Scotch
    International Journal of Health Geographics, 17
  • [33] A systematic review of spatial decision support systems in public health informatics supporting the identification of high risk areas for zoonotic disease outbreaks
    Beard, Rachel
    Wentz, Elizabeth
    Scotch, Matthew
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH GEOGRAPHICS, 2018, 17
  • [34] Interrupting the social amplification of risk process: a case study in collective emissions reduction
    Busby, J. S.
    Alcock, R. E.
    MacGillivray, B. H.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2009, 12 (03) : 297 - 308
  • [35] Characterization of Influenza A Outbreaks in Minnesota Swine Herds and Measures Taken to Reduce the Risk of Zoonotic Transmission
    Beaudoin, A.
    Johnson, S.
    Davies, P.
    Bender, J.
    Gramer, M.
    ZOONOSES AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2012, 59 (02) : 96 - 106
  • [36] SHOULD SOCIAL AMPLIFICATION OF RISK BE COUNTERACTED
    RIP, A
    RISK ANALYSIS, 1988, 8 (02) : 193 - 197
  • [37] Social Amplification of Risk in the Internet Environment
    Chung, Ik Jae
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2011, 31 (12) : 1883 - 1896
  • [38] Place, culture, and the social amplification of risk
    Masuda, JR
    Garvin, T
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2006, 26 (02) : 437 - 454
  • [40] Vaccine Exemptions and the Risk of Continued Disease Outbreaks
    Maldonado, Yvonne A.
    O'Leary, Sean
    Hotez, Peter
    PEDIATRICS, 2022, 149 (01)