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Unveiling cultures in emergency response communication networks on social media: following the 2016 Louisiana floods

Authors
Yeo, JungwonKnox, Claire ConnollyJung, Kyujin
Issue Date
3월-2018
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Louisiana floods; Culture; Response communication; Social media; Network analysis
Citation
QUALITY & QUANTITY, v.52, no.2, pp.519 - 535
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
QUALITY & QUANTITY
Volume
52
Number
2
Start Page
519
End Page
535
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/77253
DOI
10.1007/s11135-017-0595-3
ISSN
0033-5177
Abstract
While culture in emergency management has gained attention from the field of risk communication, few have systemically dealt with the nuances of general culture involved in the formation and differentiation of risk communication. To fill this gap, this research aims to first examine cultural nuances from the 2016 Louisiana flood response by primarily focusing on communications embedded in social media. The results from social network analysis and content analysis highlight that the flood response communication had strong cultural characteristics, highlighting the notion that of the cultures in Louisiana-faith-based, local authority, and nonprofits-were the prominent cultural responders in the flood response communication. In particular, cultural similarity in both intra/inter group response communication was observed, with each communication group comprising actors who shared a common cultural background and spoke similar keywords.
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