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Disasters as Crisis Triggers for Critical Junctures? The 1976 Guatemala Case
Authors:Vincent T Gawronski  Richard Stuart Olson
Institution:1. Associate professor of political science at Birmingham‐Southern College. vgawrons@bsc.edu.;2. Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations and director of the FIU Extreme Events Institute, Office of the Vice President for Research, at Florida International University. olsonr@fiu.edu
Abstract:This article focuses on the 1976 Guatemala earthquake disaster as a possible crisis trigger, in a relatively strict application of the critical juncture analytical approach. It expands to include the broader question of what conditions might cause disasters to trigger crises that open critical junctures for nation‐states. The research concludes that the 1976 Guatemala disaster led to a high degree of community self‐organizing and alliance‐building across Guatemala, which the Guatemalan national security state at that time perceived as a fundamental crisis requiring a response. This reaction generated significant debate and policy conflict within the state; the resulting decision was massively repressive violence, with legacies that continue to this day. Another conclusion is that strictly applied, critical juncture analysis can untangle often very complicated disaster postimpact emergency, recovery, and reconstruction situations.
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