It is a strange experience to adopt a new area of scholarly interest after so
many years of devotion to the topics that sustained us since before
graduate school. But that is exactly what we did in 2005, as we watched
the devastation Hurricane Katrina wreaked on our home city of New
Orleans. As criminologists, we were of course most interested in antisocial
behavior in disaster and there were plenty of anecdotal examples of
crime in the wake of Katrina. It was tempting, even for us as scholars, to
look upon these examples and declare disasters to be criminogenic. But
to do so would have flown in the face of decades of disaster sociology,
which instead finds an abundance of prosocial behavior in the wake of
disaster. We set out on a decade-long journey to develop and refine what
is meant by crime in disaster, what is meant by the wake of disaster, what
are the most effective and appropriate ways to measure disaster crime.
and what, if anything, can be done to prevent crime in the wake of
disaster. Along this journey, we became increasingly convinced that
criminological theories were well suited to explain the antisocial behavior
that sometimes happens after disasters, and this book, Toward a
Criminology of Disaster, is our best and most deliberate attempt to
connect the empirical and the theoretical.