Dear all,

Many of us are already all too aware that the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic and 
its impacts are not being felt equally, but are having disproportionate 
consequences for some of the world's most poor and vulnerable groups.  This has 
unfortunately become a common trend in disasters, whether they are human made 
or naturally occurring (or a mix of both), and with our responses to them.

A new study of ours, published this week, highlights these themes in the 
journal Environmental Sociology:

Social media and disasters: Human security, environmental racism, and crisis 
communication in Hurricane Irma response

ABSTRACT: Social media have been widely recognized as critical communication 
channel in disaster situations. However, there is limited empirical 
investigation on how the intersecting issues of social order, environmental 
impacts, and crisis communication unfold from the perspective of a social media 
user. This study examines 60,449 tweets to and from the news media in Florida 
during and immediately after Hurricane Irma in September, 2017. Based on a 
critical review of the literature coupled with an eight-category coding scheme 
(including second-hand reporting, reporting on self-experience, requesting 
help, coordinating relief efforts, and expressing well wishes), the article 
assesses the content and timing of tweets before, during, and after the storm. 
It finds that thematically, twitter coverage not only covers the storm itself 
but pressing social issues such as looting, price gouging, the privileging of 
elites in rebuilding efforts, environmental vulnerability, and abandoning pets. 
Temporally, the volume of different tweets peaked and dropped at different 
stages; for example, tweets about personal experience peaked when the hurricane 
hit the ground while requests for help peaked in the days after the hurricane. 
The study allows for a better understanding of the sociological, environmental, 
and even social justice impacts and related disaster response through the use 
of social media.

Citation: Sovacool, BK, X Xu, G Zarazua de Rubens, and C Chen. "Social media 
and disasters: Human security, environmental racism, and crisis communication 
in Hurricane Irma response," Environmental Sociology 6(3) (Fall, 2020), pp. 
291-306.

A special thanks to Dr. Chien-fei Chen for leading the very innovative form of 
social media data collection.

The study builds on earlier work of ours showing the energy justice, social 
justice, elitist and political ecology elements of disasters and our responses 
to them, published in:

Sovacool, BK. "Don't let disaster recovery perpetuate injustice," Nature 549 
(September 28, 2017), p. 433.

Sovacool, BK, M Tan-Mullins, and W Abrahamse. "Bloated bodies and broken 
bricks: Power, ecology, and inequality in the political economy of natural 
disaster recovery," World Development 110 (October, 2018), pp. 243-255.

Sovacool, BK, L Baker, M Martiskainen, and A Hook. "Processes of elite power 
and low-carbon pathways: Experimentation, financialisation, and dispossession," 
Global Environmental Change 59 (November, 2019), 101985, pp. 1-14.

Anybody wanting copies of any of these works need only ask. And please, build 
on this research to create more equitable, and accountable, post-disaster 
interventions going forward.

Sincerely,
________________________
Benjamin K. Sovacool, Ph.D FAcSS
Professor of Energy Policy
Director of the Sussex Energy Group
Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU)
University of Sussex Business School
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