REJECTED - publisher's policy states that PDF cannot be archivedThis paper considers Deleuze and Guattari's notions of the smooth and the striated as a basis for rethinking the events of Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans in September 2005. It is argued here that popular narratives of Katrina, and perspectives on disaster from the field of organization studies, have tended to be conditioned by a long-standing and restrictive dualism between 'man' (organization) and 'nature' (disorganization), and an associated, anthropocentric moral framework. By contrast, Deleuze and Guattari are seen to offer a set of concepts relating to spatial and material patterns of organization which allow us to move beyond such a conceptual dualism t...
Disasters overwhelm plans and collapse government organizations, which sometimes manage to rebuild i...
This Article highlights the hazards of hindsight analysis of the causes of catastrophic events, focu...
It is increasingly difficult to distinguish natural events from those influenced by human actions. F...
Abstract Richard Wagner the Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University. The ideas pres...
2013-07-29This dissertation defines and advances a theory of social theodicy as a collective respons...
This paper uses the theoretical and analytical resources of critical theory to explore the processes...
Failed government responses to severe disasters, including Hurricane Katrina, have led to political ...
Steering away from the more obvious concern with the breakdown of social order following Hurricane K...
The overarching theme of this book is that neoliberal policies were the main reason for the devastat...
The Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans situation was commonly called a “natural disaster”—an anomalou...
Using Hurricane Katrina as a case study, this thesis addresses theoretical explanations of vulnerabi...
International audienceThe qualitative, undifferentiated time of disaster affords propitious moments,...
Governmental organisations often fail to prepare themselves adequately for complex problems such as ...
This Article highlights the hazards of hindsight analysis of the causes of catastrophic events, focu...
This article examines representations and ideology as integral parts of the creation of a natural di...
Disasters overwhelm plans and collapse government organizations, which sometimes manage to rebuild i...
This Article highlights the hazards of hindsight analysis of the causes of catastrophic events, focu...
It is increasingly difficult to distinguish natural events from those influenced by human actions. F...
Abstract Richard Wagner the Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University. The ideas pres...
2013-07-29This dissertation defines and advances a theory of social theodicy as a collective respons...
This paper uses the theoretical and analytical resources of critical theory to explore the processes...
Failed government responses to severe disasters, including Hurricane Katrina, have led to political ...
Steering away from the more obvious concern with the breakdown of social order following Hurricane K...
The overarching theme of this book is that neoliberal policies were the main reason for the devastat...
The Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans situation was commonly called a “natural disaster”—an anomalou...
Using Hurricane Katrina as a case study, this thesis addresses theoretical explanations of vulnerabi...
International audienceThe qualitative, undifferentiated time of disaster affords propitious moments,...
Governmental organisations often fail to prepare themselves adequately for complex problems such as ...
This Article highlights the hazards of hindsight analysis of the causes of catastrophic events, focu...
This article examines representations and ideology as integral parts of the creation of a natural di...
Disasters overwhelm plans and collapse government organizations, which sometimes manage to rebuild i...
This Article highlights the hazards of hindsight analysis of the causes of catastrophic events, focu...
It is increasingly difficult to distinguish natural events from those influenced by human actions. F...