Ungar - Moral Panic Versus The Risk Society The Implications of The Changing Sites of Social Anxiety
Ungar - Moral Panic Versus The Risk Society The Implications of The Changing Sites of Social Anxiety
Ungar - Moral Panic Versus The Risk Society The Implications of The Changing Sites of Social Anxiety
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Sheldon Ungar
ABSTRACT
This paper compares moral panic with the potential political catastrophes of a
risk society. The aim of the comparison is threefold: 1. to establish the position
of risk society threats alongside more conventional moral panics; 2. to examine
the conceptual shifts that accompany the new types of threats; and 3. to outline
the changing research agenda. The paper suggests that as new sites of social
anxiety have emerged around environmental, nuclear, chemical and medical
threats, the questions motivating moral panic research have lost much of their
utility. Conceptually, it examines how the roulette dynamics of the risk society
accidents expose hidden institutional violations that redound into hot potatoes
that are passed among and fumbled by various actors. Changing conceptions of
folk devils, claims making activities, and of a safety are also discussed.
Moral panic has enjoyed a good run in the sociology of deviance, where it
acquired a special af nity with youth-related issues. This paper suggests
that the sociological domain carved out by moral panic is most fruitfully
understood as the study of the sites and conventions of social anxiety and
fear. Researchers select particular crises to investigate, and thereby ignore
others. But societies change, as do the phenomena associated with out-
breaks of public concern or alarm. As new crises accumulate and become
more visible, they are likely to nd their way on to the research agenda.
This paper examines new sites of social anxiety that have emerged along-
side moral panics. These are best captured by Becks (1992) concept of a
risk society. The paper, then, compares the elements and conditions of
moral panic with those of the political potential of catastrophes bred in a risk
society (Beck 1992: 24; italics in original). The aim of the comparison is
British Journal of Sociology Vol. No. 52 Issue No. 2 ( June 2001) pp. 271291
2001 London School of Economics and Political Science ISSN 0007-1315 print/1468-4446 online
Published by Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd on behalf of the LSE
DOI: 10.1080/00071310120044980
272 Sheldon Ungar
pathogen linked not only to water but to hamburger disease (it may be
caused by the overuse of antibiotics in animal feed). The rst suspected E.
coli death was on May 15. The public was warned on May 21. The source of
the E. coli contamination in Walkerton remains unknown. As the media,
environmental groups and opposing political parties forage for infor-
mation, a host of incriminating institutional failures have emerged and all
parties are seeking to avoid carrying the hot potato.
Signi cant questions (in simpli ed form) are as follow: 1. Why did it take
so long for town authorities to inform the populace of the risk?; 2. Why
didnt the laboratory hired to test drinking water alert medical of cials?
(the pathogen was detected about ve days prior to the outbreak; appar-
ently there is no legal duty to do so); 3. Did the closing of all Ministry of
the Environment water-testing labs and their privatization in 1996 con-
tribute to the problem?; and 4. Did downsizing of the Ministr y of the
Environment (about a 40 per cent decrease in budget and 30 per cent in
staff) contribute to the outbreak?
With a range of additional questions, four inquiries have been estab-
lished by the police, the coroners of ce, the Ministry of the Environment,
and an independent public hearing (the Provincial Government initially
repudiated the latter, but bowed to public pressures).2 Several class-action
lawsuits have also been launched. There have been numerous reports of
bacterial and pesticide contamination in other towns, several of which have
been ordered to boil their water. Questions are also being raised about
long-term effects, since E. coli O157:H7 can cause permanent kidney
damage, especially in children. Walkertons tourist industr y has been
devastated (with con icting claims over who should bear the costs), and
there is a pervasive sense in commentary from rural areas that one can
never trust the water again.
COEXISTING ANXIETIES?
How will the rise of such risk society issues affect the occurrence and
development of moral panics? A dif culty in addressing this question is a
lack of agreement about what is happening with moral panics. McRobbie
and Thornton (1995) argue that panics are harder to constitute than they
once were. Citing the failed effort to construct a moral panic around single
mothers in Britain, they suggest that the proliferation of mass media and
the attendant capacity of folk devils to ght back (they are less marginal-
ized than they once were) have sharply curtailed the potential for moral
panics. In contrast, Thompson (1998: 2) refers to the increasing rapidity
in the succession of moral panics and the all-pervasive quality of panics
that distinguish the current era. These contradictor y claims can be seen in
practice in North America. While successful US moral panics have been
directed against single mothers and illegal immigrants, efforts to construct
Moral panic versus the risk society 275
To compare the two types of social anxiety, this paper draws on analyses of
moral panic because it is a more seasoned concept whose antecedence has
allowed time for the systematic formulation of criteria. The most systematic
(if at times plodding) historical and theoretical account of moral panic is
provided by Goode and Ben-Yehuda (1994a, 1994b). They list ve crucial
elements or criteria of moral panic: 1. Concern; 2. Hostility; 3. Consensus
4. Disproportionality; and 5. Volatility. The ensuing comparison is guided
by their ve crucial elements, though the organization of the discussion
departs from theirs.
The present analysis focuses on the conceptual shifts that accompany
emerging risk society threats and the changing research agenda implied by
them. Conceptually, moral panic is linked to a social constructionist
276 Sheldon Ungar
perspective. The main issues addressed in this research concern the exag-
geration of the actual threat and the use of panics to engineer social con-
sensus and control. With risk society accidents being highly unpredictable
and uncontrollable, the social constructionist concern with exaggeration is
largely undermined as an analytic strategy. The roulette dynamics of risk
society accidents are also at variance with the model of social control and
folk devils used in moral panic research. Instead of authorities and other
institutional actors using social anxieties to impose moral order, they can
nd themselves as carriers of hot potatoes. Methodologically, the risk
society points to an array of new questions and throws into relief some
faulty research assumptions and procedures found in moral panic studies.
Failed Panics
At the extreme, one could contend that knowledge about moral panics is
fundamentally tainted. Virtually all of the research involves retrospective
studies of panics which were deemed authentic. But in the absence of
comparable examples of unsuccessful efforts, conclusions about key vari-
ables and processes amount to asserting that what transpired (more or
less) had to. Thus it is usual to attribute panics to broader social, economic
or political strains, but no effort is made to determine whether these
278 Sheldon Ungar
downloaded from the Internet revealed oating blame over a three week
period. Initially, hostility was directed against British farmers. Then the
British government carried the hot potato as claims of a cover-up emerged.
Finally, the European Economic Union became the primary target when it
instituted a ban on British beef exports.
Conceptually, the shift in social control processes and in the nature and
targets of social reactions are probably the most signi cant sociological
developments associated with the risk society. With moral panic, authori-
ties either play a central role in initiating panics or are likely to join
ongoing proceedings and derive some bene t from legitimating and
perhaps directing them. In the roulette dynamics characteristic of manu-
factured accidents accidents is used as a shorthand to cover actual
mishaps, as well as claimed mishaps or claims about potential mishaps
authorities typically forfeit their commanding role and may become the
target of moral outrage. Rather than amplifying the threat, they usually try
to dampen it.
In what follows, I argue that roulette dynamics are deeply embedded in
the relevant institutions and technologies of modernism and hence cannot
be eradicated by more prudent actions or improvements in risk communi-
cation. Indeed, faulty communication can be regarded as a congenital
consequence of institutional arrangements, rather than a free- oating
problem that can be solved on its own (cf. Powell and Leiss 1997).
Uncertainty and unpredictability are at the core of the risk society. New
technologies, especially what Beck (1995: 20) terms mega-technologies,
involve complex systems or interactions that cannot be adequately tested in
laboratories or by computer simulations. Rather, their unanticipated con-
sequences can only be discovered after they are implemented. Effectively,
they must be tested in a societal laboratory (Tenner 1996). This shift from
pre-market to post-market evaluation means that the scienti c discovery
of side effects often corresponds with the social birth of a new and unset-
tling threat.10 A safety model is being replaced by a post-market coping
model.
Such after-the-fact discoveries serve to undermine the role of what Beck
terms public guardians. Indeed, the latter often nd themselves playing a
game of roulette with collective safety. To overcome resistance to new tech-
nologies resistance can be strong enough to block implement, as illus-
trated by genetic manipulation of food in the European Union guardians
of public safety must engage in discourses of reassurance, varying from the
presentation of esoteric scienti c gures to eating a hamburger at a press
conference. Since evidence indicates that the public wants an absolute
yes/no answer to questions about risk (Ali 1999; Powell and Leiss 1997: 20),
guardians work with contradictor y dynamics that require them to provide
no-risk assurances that are unfounded and cannot, realistically, be
founded.
To make matters worse, the demands put on public guardians include
not only resistance to some new technologies, but concerted demands for
Moral panic versus the risk society 283
distinguishable social type (such as the Mod or the Rocker) whose visi-
bility is the basis of his or her expurgation (Hay 1995: 198).12 With risk
society accidents, the violators are more institutionally-based and somewhat
invisible. It is often their routine rather than deviant actions that underlie
the problem, and the hot potato tends to be passed among different
groups, rather than befall a single disposed one (e.g., Vaughan 1996). The
targets of public anger are as likely to be seen as perplexed, vacillating and
inept as evil or malign, especially as beleaguered experts search for
immediate answers to complex questions in what amounts to a media sh
tank. That is, accidents give rise to a need for science-on-demand, some-
thing that the deliberate process of science can rarely supply (Doern 1999).
Rather than serving as a force of social control or cohesion, risk society
accidents tend to create corrosive communities as the different actors try
to deny their culpability and pass the hot potato (Freudenburg 1997). In
this foraging process, public trust is the ultimate victim.
The impacts of manufactured accidents also tend to be more severe and
chronic than those associated with moral panics. According to Altheide
(1997), the problem fame that has emerged in the media to deal with
moral panic-related issues implies that there is An Answer to the problem.
The system may be overburdened, but at least something can be done
about the situation. Such formulistic solutions, rendered familiar by past
variations on the theme, rarely apply to risk society accidents. That is, con-
tamination by modern hazards tends to be more insidious and unbounded.
There is an irreducible ambiguity to the harm, as toxic effects can be dif -
cult to identify, take years to manifest themselves, or not appear until the
next generation. The ambiguity not only means that it is extremely dif cult
to sound the all clear, but that toxic tort cases stretch conventional rules
of evidence and liability (Grambling and Krogman 1997). The upshot is to
create corrosive communities, as demands for admissions of blame and
compensation are thrown into the political arena with, all too often, ex-
plosive effects.
They might well have added that the extreme degree of scienti c uncer-
tainty surrounding these types of issues can take years, if not decades, to
reduce (e.g., Schneider 1994).
Not surprisingly, perhaps, their efforts to shore up disproportionality
lead them into an objectivist position. When they assert that incalculability
is not true for possibly most problems, they are implying the existence of
a set of known and agreed on threats. But what is at issue is not the quan-
tity of real threats, but those speci c conditions that successfully emerge
as sites of social anxiety. In the 1990s, strange weather, emerging viruses,
antibiotic resistance, the possible drop in sperm counts due to gender
bending hormone disrupters, as well as BSE and outbreaks of E. coli have
all been in the forefront of media and (possibly) public concern. So too
has terrorism (TWA Flight 800), and the intense anxiety over job security
prompted by corporate downsizing ostensibly linked to the competitive
demands of globalization. Of these, only TWA Flight 800 comes remotely
close to the criteria that Goode and Ben-Yehuda postulate as necessary to
demonstrate disproportionality.
If the intractable scienti c uncertainties of risk society issues mostly
obviate the central moral panic/social constructionist concern with exag-
gerated threats, the volatility of the former puts a further dent into the idea
of disproportionality. Since a hot potato can be handed off several times
before it securely befalls a speci c target, there is the question of whether
286 Sheldon Ungar
CONCLUSION
The present analysis uses the developments associated with a risk society to
throw into relief some blinkers surrounding the moral panic-deviance
nexus. For all its pitfalls, one cannot wish away the reality that many soci-
ologists want a concept like moral panic as a tool to debunk particular
social claims or reactions. Taking a critical posture is not inherently un-
scienti c. Rather, it depends on whether or not observers have suf ciently
rigorous evidence to support the contention that particular reactions are
patently unwarranted. For most issues, the requisite evidence has been
lacking, and hence sociological pronouncements have not been particu-
larly authoritative.
Social anxieties raise the basic issue of safety. Moral panics, along with
earlier industrial risks, were largely contained in a discourse of safety.
Moral deviants could be identi ed (there were tests for witchcraft, with an
embedded ambiguity that always rendered it possible to nd deviants).
The deviants were then, at least theoretically, subject to social control.
Indeed, even if social reactions were more symbolic than practical, they
could still serve to af rm moral boundaries. And the latter could be effec-
tuated regardless of whether the claims exaggerated the nature of the
threat or not.
A safety discourse faces rupture in the risk society. Invisible contami-
nants, intractable scienti c uncertainties, unpredictable system effects, the
almost tragic calls for science-on-demand at the height of an accident, the
pr ying open of standard operating procedures, efforts to pass off the hot
potato, and potential latency effects that hinder closure of the threat
these all suggest that planning and pre-market testing have been replaced
by post-market coping, as things are wont to go boom in the night.
Hindsight notwithstanding, it can be presumed that British authorities
had no idea that announcing a tentative link between BSE and 10 possible
cases of CJD would touch off a marauding storm. As previously noted, the
288 Sheldon Ungar
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The author would like to thank John Hannigan, Malcolm MacKinnon, and
an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on earlier versions of this
paper.
NOTES
1. This summary is based on a careful commentators have adopted this term, its
reading of Toronto newspapers and weekly use is now commonplace but trivial. Jour-
magazines. It only paints the broad strokes; nalists, they observe, use moral panic to
the detailed ordering of events and refer to exaggerated or even falsified
miscues remain to be sorted out. threats.
2. The crisis has been so volatile that 4. The NandoTimes Health and
the Progressive Conservative government Science site covers up to a dozen new issues
in Ontario has backtracked on several daily.
issues and adopted an uncharacteristically 5. Jenkins (1999) interesting study of
apologetic and conciliatory tone. designer drugs, for example, focuses on
3. McRobbie and Thornton (1995) the media, enforcement agencies and
note that since journalists and other social Congressional investigations, but simply
Moral panic versus the risk society 289
ignores public reactions. Hay (1995) 12. Hay (1995: 198 italics in original)
insightfully analyses media rhetoric and observes that the James Bulger case is
tactics, but leaves the public as a residual characterized by the invisibility of the folk
categor y. devil , since the two ten-year-old children
6. According to McRobbie and Thorn- seen leading him away on videotape do not
ton (1995: 561), Cohens Folk Devils and t the stylized image of folk devils.
Moral Panics is rightfully a classic of media 13. From the point of view of selling the
sociology . . . problem, a future-orientation creates a
7. The distinction between intense clear liability. Speci cally, concern about
concern and fear is hardly addressed in the the future is discounted in institutional
literature (e.g., Goode and Ben-Yehuda thinking and in virtually ever y public
1994a: 33). Since these are primitive con- arena and economic calculation.
cepts, I note but not do pursue the
problem.
8. Whereas it would be mistaken to
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