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    Crowd Management

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    Crowd management Preparing for disasters Whenever large numbers of people come together to watch an event‚ there is potential for major disasters. No-one ever suspects that day watching a sport event is is a major risk to life and health but history proves otherwise. Sport administrators are required to conduct risk auditing for all types of events‚ large and small. Any failure to do this can result in an law suits for negligence. One important aspect of risk auditing is to examine all possible

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    Crowd Control (All persons have the right to march‚ demonstrate‚ protest‚ rally‚ or perform other activities protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and The California Constitution. However‚ any limitations or restrictions placed on demonstrations or other First Amendment activities must be justified by the requirements of maintaining public safety‚ public health‚ or safe access/ egress from the area‚ and should restrict no more speech than necessary.) *Definition: -Techniques

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    4 Elements the Wars

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    The Wars: Four Elements It was the ancient Greek philosopher‚ Empedocles‚ who first established the four elements: earth‚ water‚ air and fire. He also stated that everything in the world is structured by and rooted in these four elements. However during times of conflict and violence‚ humans begin to disturb this harmony. When this happens‚ the elements stop representing life and start representing a form of destruction. Throughout Robert Ross’s journey in The Wars‚ Timothy Findley exemplifies

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    Alexander Kyriakides Professor Jennifer Hyde Writing the Essay 5/2/16 Element of the Crowd The essays of David Foster Wallace are‚ in many ways‚ not about the subjects they pretend to cover. Foster Wallace is not concerned with lobsters‚ high-stake tennis matches or the way that Midwesterners gather around their TV’s. Instead‚ Foster Wallace is interested with what surrounds these subjects and what they have to say about human experience. In this sense‚ the seemingly random topics Foster Wallace

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    Wisdom of Crowds

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    Submitted to: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT AND TRAINING (Sasmira’s Institute of Management Studies & Research‚ Mumbai) Submitted by: Prof. Tamojit Ghosh Roy MA (Economics); MBA; MS (Psychotherapy & Counselling); PhD Scholar (IIT Bombay) Associate Professor H. K. Institute of Management Studies & Research‚ Mumbai © 2014. Prof Roy‚ H.K. Institute of Management Studies & Research‚ Mumbai. All Rights Reserved. THE WISDOM OF CROWDS by JAMES SUROWIECKI ISBN: 978-0-385-72170-7

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    CROWD BEHAVIOUR

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    CROWDS AND VIOLENCE Deindividuation: [“Individuation” coined by Jung: a process of individuation for development of personality] Historical Research: Le Bon (1890s) When individuals “descend” in a crowd‚ they become creatures of instinct‚ barbarians (Contagion theory‚ anonymity) Festinger (1952) Individuals who sat in dim light more likely to use bad language when discussing erotic material than individuals who were not. Zimbardo (1969) Stanford Prison Experiments: Individuals dressed

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    Crowd Behavior

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    Theories of Crowd Behavior The Contagion Theory * is defined as the theory stating that members of crowds stimulates each other to higher and higher levels of emotions and irrational behavior. * Contagion often refers to the spread of disease from person to person; accordingly it focuses on the spread of emotion in a crowd. * Formulated by Gustave Le Bon. Herbert Blumer-has offered another version of this theory as it has three stages. * Milling- the first stage; people move around

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    Crowd Behaviour

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    How might we best explain crowd behaviour? (2013 Exam Question) People are likely to act in bizarre ways in a crowd compared to as an individual. A crowd can be defined as a set of individuals who share a common social identification of themselves in terms of that crowd. Crowd members should also share common goals and act in a coherent member (Reicher‚ 2008). There have been extensive amounts of research into crowd psychology‚ investigating the apparent causes and reasons for such behaviour to

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    The Wisdom of Crowds

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    The Smartest People May Not be as Smart as a Crowd‚ but Who can Find a Smart Crowd? In The Wisdom of Crowds‚ author James Surowiecki contends that the “smartest people” are often not as smart as a group of individuals formed under the right circumstances (XIII). Surowiecki backs up his claim by giving numerous real life examples of crowds that meet the criteria of having diversity of opinion‚ independence‚ decentralization and aggregation‚ and have proven to be smarter than almost any one individual

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    Man in the Crowd

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    The epigraph at the beginning of “The Man in the Crowd” brings up the interesting question of what it really means to be alone. While the actual definition of alone is “quite by oneself‚ unaccompanied‚ solitary‚” (“Alone”) the story‚ through the narrator’s thoughts and the observations of the nameless man in the crowd‚ can serve as a different perspective on being alone if applied beyond the situation in the tale. The epigraph says how terrible it is to never be alone‚ and the story serves as a metaphor

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