This is the correct response to if widespread panic is common after disasters.
What is no?
In disasters, more organizations that are like this come together.
What is unfamiliar to each other?
What is in social units?
This, in addition to features of timing & generalizability, makes quick-response disaster research unique.
What is access?
Crisis describes a phase of disorder in this.
What is a seemingly normal development of a system?
Panic is most likely in this situation.
What is when the window of opportunity for escape is quickly closing?
In disasters, adjustments for this must be made.
What is losing autonomy and freedom of action?
This is why evacuation of women and children doesn't work.
What is separating people delays evacuation and increases risk?
This is what the acronym IRB spells out.
What is the Institutional Review Board?
A crisis has three characteristics: A threat, relatively unexpected, and this.
What is the urrgency to act (or things will get worse)?
This describes when people taking necessary things, from their perspective, in that environment, and is often confused with mass looting.
What is appropriating behavior?
In disasters, you see more than usual this kind of interaction.
What is private and public sector interaction?
This is one of three factors that led to a successful boat evacuation without prior planning.
What is either: A strong local network and sense of community; A deep level of local environmental knowledge; A willingness to be flexible with existing rules and procedures while also recognizing that new rules may be required?
This is one of the two reasons triangulation is important in quick response research.
What is it can mitigate that the environment/people change rapidly AND counter the lack of baseline information.
This is one of the critical challenges for crisis management that precedes terminating.
What is either sense-making, decision-making or meaning-making?
This is when widespread looting might occur after a disaster.
What is when the disasters becomes a social occasion to push back against pre-existing widespread inequality/conflict?
In disasters, we see this kind of suspension.
What is suspension of due process or normal procedures?
This is a central aspect of Rule2B.
What is requiring mariners to deviate from rules to avoid immediate danger.
This term is what triangulation describes.
What is using multiple methods or data sources to develop a comprehensive understanding of the phenomenon?
This is the critical challenge that comes after terminating the crisis.
What is learning?
This is one of the reasons disasters are not great equalizers.
What is "different people are disproportionately impacted by disasters" and "this is related to routine vulnerabilities"?
In disasters, this characteristic describes when we might allow for work done without a permit.
What is different performance standards?
Breaking rules with vigilance ideally involved thoughtfulness, deliberation with others, and this factor.
What is the underlying purpose of the rules was preserved?
What is approves/disapproves of research involving human subjects?
This describes the confidence most people have in the continuity of their self-identity and in the constancy of the surrounding social and material environments of action.
What is ontological security?