15
GIGO about social behavior

GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University Leadership and bioterrorism

  • View
    213

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

GIGO about social behavior

Page 2: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Lee ClarkeSociology Department

Rutgers Universityhttp://leeclarke.com

Leadership and bioterrorism

Page 3: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Disaster Myths

• People will automatically follow leaders

• Need only one spokesperson, with single message

• Must worry about the “cry wolf” problem

• Police, etc. are “first responders”

• People can’t handle bad news

• Panic

Page 4: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. Thank you for flying Mandarin Airlines. As we taxi to the runway, please make yourself comfortable…and those of you sitting on the right side of the plane, please look to your LEFT!

Page 5: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 6: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 7: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 8: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Other bio-events• 1793 yellow fever in Philadelphia• 1918 Spanish flu• 1984 Rajneesh cult attack• 1932-1945 Japanese attacks on China

Exceptions: refusals to quarantine(?), burning down AIDS houses, 1894 Milwaukee smallpox outbreak

Page 9: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Not failing gracefully: Tacoma Narrows

Page 10: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Rhode Island nightclub, 2.20.03

CNN: “Panic inside club as tragedy unfolds”

Page 11: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 12: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 13: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism
Page 14: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Examples of elite panic• “There’s a greater risk of dying on the highway than

from exposure to anthrax” – bioweapons expert

• “I can honestly say there are zero persons that we believe are a high potential for anthrax” – FL DOH official

• “Isolated” incident; “cruel coincidence” – FL Gov.

• “There’s no reason to think that this incident is anything other than what we have seen in the United States over recent years” – FL Lt. Gov.

• “People should not go out of their way and do anything other than what they’re doing” – Sec of HHS

Page 15: GIGO about social behavior. Lee Clarke Sociology Department Rutgers University  Leadership and bioterrorism

Modeling official behavior

• Ignorance

• Arrogance

• Hubris

• Officials can cause “panic”