Theorizing Crisis Communication. Timothy L. Sellnow

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Theorizing Crisis Communication - Timothy L. Sellnow страница 10

Theorizing Crisis Communication - Timothy L. Sellnow

Скачать книгу

Food, for example, should be safe to eat and free of harmful E. coli contamination. Tap water should be safe to drink. It is generally expected that rivers will remain within defined areas and not spread to inundate residential or downtown areas. Seasonal influenza should be a relatively minor disorder and should not create widespread illness, death, and social disruptions. The violation of these expectations and some level of community and social consensus about the relative level of risk and threat create the perception of a crisis. A crisis condition is in contrast to what would be considered a normal condition. When people believe there is a crisis, they are likely to behave differently than they would in so-called normal times.

Crisis Types:
Lerbinger (1997) Seeger et al. (2003) Coombs (2010)
Natural disaster Public perception Natural disasters
Technological crises Natural disasters Malevolence
Confrontation Product or service crisis Technical breakdowns
Malevolence Terrorist attack Human breakdowns
Organizational misdeeds Economic crisis Challenges
Workplace violence Human resource crisis Mega-damage
Rumors Industrial crisis Organizational misdeeds
Terrorist attacks/man-made disasters Spills (oil, chemical) Workplace violence
Crises from environmental factors Transportation disasters Rumor

      Significant threats to such high-priority goals as life, property, security, health, and psychological stability are often associated with crises. These threats also create severe anxiety and stress and the need to do something, that is, to take some action in response to the threat. This reaction is sometimes described as the fight or flight response, a natural neurological response first described by psychologist Walter Cannon in the 1920s. The primary mammalian stress hormone, adrenaline, is activated when a threatening situation is faced. This hormone produces several neurological responses, including increased heart rate, constricted blood vessels, and dilated air passages. In general, these responses enhance an organism’s physical capacity to respond to a threatening situation. Gray (1988) updated the fight or flight framework into a more comprehensive four-stage process of “freeze, flight, fight, and fright.” Initially, an organism may exhibit a freeze response, exhibiting hypervigilance or awareness to the threat. The second response, according to Gray, is to flee, and if this is not an option or if fleeing is exhausted as a strategy, a fight response is activated. Finally, a strategy of fright, freezing, or immobility may occur as the organism “plays dead” in a final effort to avoid the threat.

      We have suggested elsewhere that a crisis may be defined as a specific, unexpected, non-routine event or series of events that creates high levels of uncertainty and a significant or perceived threat to high-priority goals (Seeger et al., 2003). This definition captures the three primary conditions of crisis and suggests a crisis may be a contained, single event such as the 27 April 2011, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, tornado in which 52 people died, or it may be a series of interacting and cascading events, such as the Fukushima earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster. This definition also includes the idea that a crisis should be contained or specific in its parameters. Larger issues, such as the ongoing healthcare crisis or the energy crisis, would not meet this definition.

      Others have offered more straightforward crisis definitions. Heath (1995), for example, suggests that a crisis is a risk manifest. From this perspective, a risk occurs before a crisis and is the consequence of a risk continuing to develop without appropriate efforts to manage it. This notion of a risk incubating, developing unchecked, and perhaps interacting with other factors is one of the most common views of a crisis “cause.” Therefore, crisis is also closely related to the concept of risk. Risk communication generally concerns “risk estimates, whether they are appropriate, tolerable, and risk consequences” (Heath, 1995, p. 257). Birkland (1968) described

Скачать книгу