Silent Spill: The Organization of an Industrial Crisis

Silent Spill: The Organization of an Industrial Crisis

by Thomas D. Beamish
ISBN-10:
0262523205
ISBN-13:
9780262523202
Pub. Date:
02/01/2002
Publisher:
MIT Press
ISBN-10:
0262523205
ISBN-13:
9780262523202
Pub. Date:
02/01/2002
Publisher:
MIT Press
Silent Spill: The Organization of an Industrial Crisis

Silent Spill: The Organization of an Industrial Crisis

by Thomas D. Beamish

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Overview

In the Guadalupe Dunes, 170 miles north of Los Angeles and 250 miles south of San Francisco, an oil spill persisted unattended for 38 years. Over the period 1990-1996, the national press devoted 504 stories to the Exxon Valdez accident and a mere nine to the Guadalupe spill—even though the latter is most likely the nation's largest recorded oil spill. Although it was known to oil workers in the field where it originated, to visiting regulators, and to locals who frequented the beach, the Guadalupe spill became troubling only when those involved could no longer view the sight and smell of petroleum as normal. This book recounts how this change in perception finally took place after nearly four decades and what form the response took.

Taking a sociological perspective, Thomas Beamish examines the organizational culture of the Unocal Corporation (whose oil fields produced the leakage), the interorganizational response of regulatory agencies, and local interpretations of the event. He applies notions of social organization, social stability, and social inertia to the kind of environmental degradation represented by the Guadalupe spill. More important, he uses the Guadalupe Dunes case as the basis for a broader study of environmental "blind spots." He argues that many of our most pressing pollution problems go unacknowledged because they do not cause large-scale social disruption or dramatic visible destruction of the sort that triggers responses. Finally, he develops a model of social accommodation that helps explain why human systems seem inclined to do nothing as trouble mounts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262523202
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 02/01/2002
Series: Urban and Industrial Environments
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Thomas D. Beamish is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Davis.

What People are Saying About This

Charles Perrow

In this fascinating work we see giant oil's corporate configuration, and the regulatory bureaucratic blinders, merge in a ponderous, slow and silent disaster, an organizational dance that is a harbinger of a 'new species of trouble.'

William R. Freudenburg

Beamish has managed to learn far more from an accident than have most researchers in recent decades. In this insightful work, he shows us that, in the aptly named Silent Spill, truth about power leaked out along with the dilutent. Thanks to his insights, this book has a great deal to tell us—not only about what sociology can bring to the study of accidents, but also about what the study of accidents can bring to sociology.

From the Publisher

"Breaks new ground in exploring the ways in which meaning and power mask the accumulation of environmental hazards."--Loren Lutzenhiser, Professor,
Department of Sociology, Washington State University

Endorsement

Beamish has managed to learn far more from an accident than have most researchers in recent decades. In this insightful work, he shows us that, in the aptly named Silent Spill, truth about power leaked out along with the dilutent. Thanks to his insights, this book has a great deal to tell us—not only about what sociology can bring to the study of accidents, but also about what the study of accidents can bring to sociology.

William R. Freudenburg, Professor of Rural Sociology and Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Loren Lutzenhiser

Breaks new ground in exploring the ways in which meaning and power mask the accumulation of environmental hazards.

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