__smbhome.uscs.susx.ac.uk_tjk30_Documents_Fatboy paper as (re)submitted Jan 2015.pdf (318.83 kB)
Managing to avert disaster: explaining collective resilience at an outdoor music event
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 21:36 authored by John DruryJohn Drury, David Novelli, Clifford StottThere is considerable evidence that psychological membership of crowds can protect people in dangerous events, although the underlying social–psychological processes have not been fully investigated. There is also evidence that those responsible for managing crowd safety view crowds as a source of psychological danger, views that may themselves impact upon crowd safety; yet, there has been little examination of how such ‘disaster myths’ operate in practice. In a study of an outdoor music event characterized as a near disaster, analysis of questionnaire survey data (N?=?48) showed that social identification with the crowd predicted feeling safe directly as well as indirectly through expectations of help and trust in others in the crowd to deal with an emergency. In a second study of the same event, qualitative analysis of interviews (N?=?20) and of contemporaneous archive materials showed that, in contrast to previous findings, crowd safety professionals' references to ‘mass panic’ were highly nuanced. Despite an emphasis by some safety professionals on crowd ‘disorder’, crowd participants and some of the professionals also claimed that self-organization in the crowd prevented disaster.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
European Journal of Social PsychologyISSN
0046-2772Publisher
John Wiley & SonsExternal DOI
Issue
4Volume
45Page range
533-547Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes