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Social Traps01:41

Social Traps

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Social traps are negative situations where people get caught in a direction or relationship that later proves to be unpleasant, with no easy way to back out of or avoid. The concept was orignally introduced by John Platt who applied psychology to Garrett Hardin's "Tragedy of the Commons", where in New England herd owners could let their cattle graze in the common ground. This situation seems like a good idea, but an individual could have an advantage. If they owned...
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Applications of GIS: Disaster Management and Emergency Response01:29

Applications of GIS: Disaster Management and Emergency Response

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Geographic Information System (GIS) technology is essential for risk identification, action prioritization, and resource optimization in critical situations like flooding and earthquakes. By integrating spatial and demographic data, GIS provides a comprehensive framework for emergency response.GIS integrates data layers, like rainfall intensity, topography, elevation profiles, and river levels, to model high-risk flood zones. These layers assess areas susceptible to flooding based on their...
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Fundamental Attribution Error01:14

Fundamental Attribution Error

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According to some social psychologists, people tend to overemphasize internal factors as explanations—or attributions—for the behavior of other people. They tend to assume that the behavior of another person is a trait of that person, and to underestimate the power of the situation on the behavior of others. They tend to fail to recognize when the behavior of another is due to situational variables, and thus to the person’s state. This erroneous assumption is...
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Community Based Intervention01:30

Community Based Intervention

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Community-based interventions in mental health represent a paradigm shift from institution-centered care to treatments embedded within the fabric of local communities. By prioritizing inclusion and leveraging existing societal structures, this approach fosters a supportive environment conducive to addressing mental health challenges while promoting individual dignity and agency.
Foundations of Community Mental Health Programs
Central to the success of community-based interventions is the...
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Deindividuation00:57

Deindividuation

29.0K
Deindividuation is a form of social influence on an individual’s behavior such that the individual engages in unusual or non-normal behavior while in a group setting. Why? Because in these group settings, the individual no longer sees themselves as an individual anymore, disinhibiting their behavior and personal restraint.
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Bystander Effect02:09

Bystander Effect

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The discussion of bullying highlights the problem of witnesses not intervening to help a victim. This is a common occurrence, as the following well-publicized event demonstrates. In 1964, in Queens, New York, a 19-year-old woman named Kitty Genovese was attacked by a person with a knife near the back entrance to her apartment building and again in the hallway inside her apartment building. When the attack occurred, she screamed for help numerous times and eventually died from her stab wounds.
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Updated: Nov 12, 2025

The HoneyComb Paradigm for Research on Collective Human Behavior
06:48

The HoneyComb Paradigm for Research on Collective Human Behavior

Published on: January 19, 2019

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Theorizing disaster communitas.

Steve Matthewman1, Shinya Uekusa2

  • 1Department of Sociology, University of Auckland, 10 Symonds Street, Level 9, Auckland, 1010 New Zealand.

Theory and Society
|March 22, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Communitas, the spontaneous mutual aid in disasters, needs better theory. Understanding its conditions and barriers can improve disaster risk reduction strategies.

Keywords:
AltruismCarnivalCommunitasCommunity of fateDisaster risk reduction (DRR)DisastersSocial capital

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Area of Science:

  • Sociology of disasters
  • Social psychology

Background:

  • Disaster studies often lack theoretical depth, focusing on practicalities over analysis.
  • This limits comprehensive understanding of social suffering and mitigation.
  • Communitas, or improvisational mutual aid in disasters, is well-documented but undertheorized.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To synthesize case studies to theorize communitas.
  • To identify social conditions that foster or inhibit communitas.
  • To inform disaster risk reduction (DRR) policy.

Main Methods:

  • Synthesis of numerous disaster case studies.
  • Theoretical analysis of communitas emergence, conceptualization, and influencing factors.

Main Results:

  • Identified key facilitators and barriers to communitas.
  • Developed a conceptual framework for understanding communitas.
  • Highlighted the practical implications for disaster response and policy.

Conclusions:

  • Theorizing communitas is crucial for advancing disaster studies.
  • Understanding communitas' social conditions enhances disaster risk reduction.
  • Fostering communitas can be a potent force in mitigating disaster impacts.