Disaster and the “panic myth”: a literature review
Webinars
This review challenges the belief that people panic in disasters and emphasises predictable, prosocial behaviour.
- Debunks the ‘panic myth’ in emergency contexts
- Shows most people act cooperatively under stress
- Highlights the role of social norms in disaster response
- Calls for emergency planning aligned with normal human behaviours
- Offers evidence-based advice for safer, more effective responses
- Suggests updating protocols to reflect real behaviour
How this may be relevant to you
This content has limited relevance to industry planning for mine emergencies and safety integration.
- Supports safety and emergency preparedness planning
- Encourages aligning plans with real human behaviour
- Indirectly contributes to safer operations
- Helps risk management for operational continuity
- Could inform training programs
- Offers general guidance rather than mining-specific advice
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