' Household Core Tasks and Disasters
'From: "Sharon McGhee" <smcghee@worldnet.att.net> 4:46
Subject: Household Core Tasks and Disasters
I have greatly benefited from this discussion, and would like to expand upon the following key idea behind the excerpt from Living Conditions, Disasters and Development by Bates and Peacock (1993):
that every adaptive pattern is subject to increased vulnerability as its environment changes or as rare and unusual events occur ... which its culture does not predict and for which it does not provide adaptive responses. (p. 12, bottom)
While discussing this with a colleague of mine, I was struck by the great difficulty he had with the idea of "increased vulnerability." For this reason, I thought that it would be interesting to use mission-critical components of running a household that were identified by Bates & Peacock in order to see if this is really true. Let's have some fun!
Household Core Tasks: 1. Shelter 2. Access to a supply of potable water 3. Food preservation and storage (refridge, etc.) 4. Food preparation (stove, oven, etc.) 5. Food serving (eating utensils, etc.) 6. Sleeping accommodations (beds, mats) 7. Human waste disposal 8. Washing, cleaning (clothes, dishes, utensils) 9. Bathing 10. Lighting 11. Climate control 12. Communications
One last thing before we begin: Bates and Peacock state that highly adapted cultures are very vulnerable in three areas: 1) energy supply 2) communications 3) transportation, so I will look at the impact of severe degradation of services in these areas to identify the overall vulnerability of industrial society. (Societies that are "interdependent and technologically advanced ... are the most vulnerable to sudden and complete collapse, should their energy supply be cut off or their communications and transportation systems fail." pp. 16-17)
1. Shelter UNDER-DEVELOPED: make-shift, "informal" dwellings pulled together from salvaged items of no real value. No change after a disaster. ADVANCED or highly adapted: "formal" dwellings, whose use is largely dependent upon other underlying primary systems. During a blackout, for example, high-rise apartments may become impractical due to elevator failure, or water outages. Without adequate HVAC or open windows, dwellings may become unusable. Greater fire risk when fire suppression systems fail. COMMENT: These urban structures are, then, more vulnerable than those found in a poorer rural setting.
2. Access to a supply of potable water UNDER-DEVELOPED: usually a spring, river or stream, or local well. Although at risk of contamination during a disaster, these water supplies are self-regulating and likely to return to normal functioning after a disaster. HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: very vulnerable during a disaster due to break-down of pumps, well contamination, loss of service. In the case of denser populations, greater numbers are impacted during an outage. Water trucks had to come in after Hurricane Opal, revealing another underlying layer of dependencies. Malfunctions with water distribution systems can accelerate the delivery of contaminated water (Cincinnati's experience with cryptosporin, TCE contaminated PVC pipes in the '70's and '80's) to a greater population. COMMENT: Again, larger numbers are put at greater risk when these systems fail.
3. Food preservation and storage (refridge, etc.) UNDER-DEVELOPED: minimal facilities for food secured through a system with very shallow logical depth. However, disasters in the area of food production can have grave population impacts (famine, draught). HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: features highly developed food preservation systems of great complexity, and great logical depth. Once harvested or produced, food follows a serpantine path before it can be consumed at the dinner table. But acute failures at any of these critical steps can put the entire food distribution system at risk, due to multiple layers of complexity. For example, the loss of power, even for a couple of days, renders refridgeration capacity useless. COMMENT: Although I would say that a disaster heavily impacts both societies, the food distribution system of the advanced society can put at risk greater numbers in less time than the less sophisticated society. The frequent "recall" of contaminated food from the distribution system is evidence of this vulnerability.
4. Food preparation (stove, oven, etc.) UNDER-DEVELOPED: wood-fires, etc. HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: Again, without electrical power, natural gas lines (cf. the Florida gas outage this past month), this becomes impossible. COMMENT: This is a very vulnerable area when the systems upon which we depend so heavily fail.
5. Food serving (eating utensils, etc.) UNDER-DEVELOPED: few utensils, dishes, etc. HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: many utensils, dishes, etc.
6. Sleeping accommodations (beds, mats) UNDR-DEVELOPED: simple accommodations, impacted along with shelter during a disaster. HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: Sleeping arrangements here are more heavily dependent upon shelter (which is generally more vulnerable and more dependent on underlying systems cf. above).
7. Human waste disposal UNDER-DEVEOPED: disaster impacts from improperly disposed of human waste in primitive and traditional societies can be very great, especially when scarce drinking water has been contaminated (typhoid, cholera). HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: If the underlying infrastructures that dispose of human waste (pump or lift stations, secondary treatment facilities, etc.) are rendered useless, the potential for widespread devastation (sewage over flows and backing up into homes, into low lying wetland contamination, or coastal area contamination) is much greater, and the potential population effected is larger.
8. Washing, cleaning (clothes, dishes, utensils) UNDER-DEVELOPED: about the same after a disaster, since potable water supplies seem to be less vulnerable. HIGHLY ADVANCED or developed: This is were we are in big trouble. Without water running out of the tap, without electricity to run our washers, dryers and dishwashers, what would we do? Probably eat from dirty dishes, wear the same clothes, sleep in the same bed-clothes for years. Very unhygenic. COMMENT: I hadn't given this much thought until yesterday. This morning I got some dish-pans at a garage sale. Do you know how they washed clothes during the Great Depression? By boiling them in large metal tubs. Where can I get one? How will I heat it? Should our systems fail, this will be heavily impacted, much more so than in under-developed societies.
9. Bathing Under-developed: Tubs, special pans, cold water in 50% of Peru. Highly advanced or developed: I think people would do without rather than take a cold shower. Last week we tried out a 6 gal solar heated camp shower that was a delight. My wife thought it was even too hot! COMMENT: If our systems fail, we are screwed in this area, don't you think?
10. Lighting Under-developed: I don't know. Do they just do without? Candles? Highly advanced or developed: Heavily impacted. I cannot imagine life without indoor artificial lighting. I would probably start getting up before dawn to make full use of the daylight, then retire when the sun sets. wow. Tagore, the Asian Indian poet and humanist (Gandhi's sponsor) would greet the sun at dawn with a prayer/ritual. Maybe doing without wouldn't be so bad after all.
11. Climate control Under-developed: see shelter above. Highly advanced or developed: see shelter above.
12. Communications Under-developed: primitive societies rely on oral tradition (story telling, town crier, etc.) as a means of transmitting information. Their accomplishments in this area are legendary. Highly advanced or developed: The destruction of modern means of communication will have a devastating effect: disorienting, fear-producing, etc. given the extent to which we have allowed ourselves to become the mere extenstion of our media. I stopped watching TV about a year ago. Now I know why. COMMENT: I take this category to be one of the under-emphasized aspects of advanced society vulnerability. The consequences of misinformation being spread can be incredible, just as the failure of a timely warning being unheard can lead to a population's extinction. Right?
Well, that's it for now. Please feel free to make corrections and additions. Glen |