Attributions about the causes and consequences of cataclysmic events
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Personal and Interpersonal Loss
- Vol. 3 (1) , 7-24
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10811449808414428
Abstract
Basic to the study of disasters and other life crises are questions about how victims and observers make sense of the event. Attribution theory, which describes how and why people ascribe causes to events and behaviors, can provide a useful framework for helping researchers in their quest to understand how and why victims and observers respond as they do to cataclysmic events. In spite of its clear potential for guiding research, surprisingly few studies looking at disaster and nearly no studies of terrorism have used an attributional perspective. While other negative life crises have been studied, cataclysmic events such as disasters and terrorist attacks possess distinctive features that set them apart from other types of trauma. Because of differences in degree of consensus, perceived control, and intentionality, cataclysmic events offer attribution researchers a unique arena in which to test and clarify basic assumptions. This article reveiws the work done in the field and outlines areas of concern for future efforts.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Role of Counterfactual Thinking and Causal Attribution in Accident‐Related JudgmentsJournal of Applied Social Psychology, 1996
- The Effects of Hindsight Bias and Causal Attribution on Human Response to Environmental Events1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1994
- In the eyes of the beholder: technological and naturalistic interpretations of a disasterIndustrial Crisis Quarterly, 1992
- Symptoms of Chronic Stress Following a Natural Disaster and Discovery of a Human-Made HazardEnvironment and Behavior, 1992
- Lay Attributions about Distress after a Natural DisasterPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1992
- Chronic Stress and Toxic Waste: The Role of Uncertainty and Helplessness1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1991
- A Test of the Consensus and Distinctiveness Attribution Principles in Victims of Disaster1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1991
- Sympathy and Altruism in Response to DisastersThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1990
- Attributional retraining: A review.Psychological Bulletin, 1985
- An analysis of learned helplessness: Continuous changes in performance, strategy, and achievement cognitions following failure.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1978