The Real Disaster Is Above Ground: A Mine Fire and Social Conflict

Voorkant
University Press of Kentucky, 11 jul 2014 - 212 pagina's

In the 1950s Centralia was a small town, like many others in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania. But since the 1960s, it has been consumed, outwardly and inwardly by a fire that has inexorably spread in the abandoned mines beneath it. The earth smokes, subsides, and breathes poisonous gases. No less destructive has been the spread of dissension and enmity among the townspeople. The Real Disaster Above Ground tells the story of the fire and the tragic failure of all efforts to counter it.

This study of the Centralia fire represents the most thorough canvass of the documentary materials and the community that has appeared. The authors report on the futile efforts of residents to reach a common understanding of an underground threat that was not readily visible and invited multiple interpretations. They trace the hazard management strategies of government agencies that, ironically, all too often created additional threats to the welfare of Centralians. They report on the birth and demise of community organizations, each with its own solution to the problem and its diehard partisans. The final solution, now being put into effect, is to abandon the town and relocate its people.

Centralia's environmental disaster, the authors argue, is not a local or isolated phenomenon. It warns of the danger lurking in our own technology when safeguards fail and disaster management policy is not in place to respond to failure, as the examples of Chernobyl and Bhopal have clearly demonstrated.

The lessons in this study of the fate of a small town in Pennsylvania are indeed sobering. They should be pondered by a variety of social scientists and planners, by all those dealing with the behavior of people under stress and those responsible for the welfare of the public.

 

Inhoudsopgave

A Dying Coal Town
1
1 King Coal Built a Town but Not a Community
13
2 The Engineering Puzzle 19621981
29
3 Ambiguous Evidence and Contradictory Signals
43
4 A Group Emerges and the Town Divides
54
5 Confrontation and Conflict
75
6 A Thwarted Struggle for Unity
108
7 One Town Many Groups
132
8 This Town Is Dead
150
9 Making Sociological Sense of the Story
158
Participatory Research in Centralia
173
Notes
178
Index
198
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2014)

J. Stephen Kroll-Smith is associate professor of sociology at the Hazelton campus of Pennsylvania State University. Stephen Robert Couch is associate professor of sociology at the Schuylkill campus of Pennsylvania State University.

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