single-dr.php

JDR Vol.21 No.2 pp. 538-548
(2026)

Paper:

Forecasting Crime During Disaster: The 1977 New York City Blackout and Hurricane Katrina

Bethany L. Van Brown ORCID Icon

Sacred Heart University
5151 Park Avenue, Fairfield, Connecticut 06825, USA

Corresponding author

Received:
May 20, 2025
Accepted:
February 4, 2026
Published:
April 1, 2026
Keywords:
disaster, crime, criminology of disaster, Katrina, blackout
Abstract

Veteran disaster researchers argue that a “therapeutic community” emerges after disaster and that prosocial behavior overrides criminal or antisocial behavior. However, there are examples of crime occurring during disaster, and contemporary disaster researchers are challenging the claim that crime does not happen. Some scholars make the case that enough antisocial behavior occurs during disaster to warrant the development of a criminology of disaster. Using secondary data analysis, this paper compares pre-event social structural similarities between two disasters during which crime occurred, the 1977 New York City Blackout and Hurricane Katrina (2005), with the goal of furthering the development of a criminology of disaster. Although these are two different disasters that happened in very distinctive moments in time, New York City and New Orleans had commonalities with regard to indicators of social vulnerability and structural strain that are worthy of further interrogation and that could help anticipate where crimogenic behavior may emerge during disaster. While previous studies have examined the role of pre-existing structural strain, studies have not compared such disparate events, a blackout and a hurricane flood event, that are nearly 50 years apart. This analysis illuminates the significance of pre-existing conditions, thereby adding to the explanatory value of applying structural strain to disaster. Pre-disaster indicators like the unemployment rate, the social history of the impacted area, the type of event, the stability of law enforcement, and the pre-event crime picture arguably relate to whether crime happens during disaster. While this argument is not airtight, because some crimes are opportunistic, it adds to the explanatory value of applying criminological theories to disaster.

Cite this article as:
B. Brown, “Forecasting Crime During Disaster: The 1977 New York City Blackout and Hurricane Katrina,” J. Disaster Res., Vol.21 No.2, pp. 538-548, 2026.
Data files:
References
  1. [1] E. L. Quarantelli, “Images of withdrawal behavior in disasters: Some basic misconceptions,” Social Problems, Vol.8, pp. 68-79, 1960. https://doi.org/10.2307/798631
  2. [2] C. Fritz, “Disasters,” R. K. Merton and R. Nisbet (Eds.), “Contemporary Social Problems,” Harcourt, 1961.
  3. [3] P. J. Gurney, “The therapeutic community revisited: Some suggested modifications and their implications,” University of Delaware Disaster Research Center, Preliminary Paper, No.39, 1977.
  4. [4] R. R. Dynes and E. L. Quarantelli, “Helping behavior in large-scale disasters: A social organizational approach,” D. H. Smith and J. Macaulay (Eds.), “Participation in Social and Political Activities,” pp. 339-354, Jossey-Bass, 1980.
  5. [5] E. L. Quarantelli, “Organizational behavior in disasters and implications for disaster planning,” National Emergency Training Center, Federal Emergency Management Agency, 1984.
  6. [6] D. Alexander and G. Pescaroli, “What are cascading disasters?,” UCL Open Environment, Vol.1, No.1, 2019. https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444/ucloe.000003
  7. [7] D. Harper and K. Frailing (Eds.), “Crime and Criminal Justice in Disasters,” Carolina Academic Press, 2015.
  8. [8] E. H. Wohlenberg, “The ‘geography of civility’ revisited: New York blackout looting, 1977,” Economic Geography, Vol.59, No.1, pp. 29-44, 1982. https://doi.org/10.2307/143618
  9. [9] L. Genevie, S. R. Kaplan, H. Peck, E. L. Struening, J. E. Kallo, G. L. Muhlin, and A. Richardson, “Predictors of looting in selected neighborhoods of New York City during the blackout of 1977,” Sociology and Social Research, Vol.71, Issue 3, pp. 228-231, 1987.
  10. [10] K. Frailing and D. W. Harper, “Crime and hurricanes in New Orleans,” D. L. Brunsma, D. Overfelt, and J. S. Picou (Eds.), “The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe,” 2nd Edition, pp. 55-74, Rowman and Littlefield, 2010.
  11. [11] E. L. Quarantelli, “Conventional beliefs and counterintuitive realities,” Disasters: Recipes and Remedies, Vol.75, No.3, pp. 873-904, 2008.
  12. [12] B. Brown, P. Jenkins, and T. Wachtendorf, “Shelter in the Storm: A battered women’s shelter and catastrophe,” Int. J. of Mass Emergencies & Disasters, Vol.28 No.2, pp. 226-245, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1177/028072701002800204
  13. [13] K. Frailing and D. W. Harper, “Toward a Criminology of Disaster,” Springer, 2017.
  14. [14] E. L. Quarantelli and R. R. Dynes, “Response to social crisis and disaster,” Annual Review of Sociology, Vol.3, pp. 23-49, 1977. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.so.03.080177.000323
  15. [15] E. L. Quarantelli, “What Is a Disaster?: Perspectives on the Question,” Routledge, 1998.
  16. [16] A. H. Barton, “Communities in Disaster: A Sociological Analysis of Collective Stress Situations,” Doubleday, 1969.
  17. [17] A. Oliver-Smith and S. M. Hoffman, “The Angry Earth: Disaster in Anthropological Perspective,” Routledge, 1999.
  18. [18] K. J. Tierney, “The Social Roots of Risk: Producing Disasters, Promoting Resilience,” Stanford University Press, 2014.
  19. [19] W. L. Waugh, “Assessing quality in emergency management,” A. Halachmi (Ed.), “Performance and Quality Measurement in Government: Issues and Experiences,” pp. 665-682, Chatelaine Press, 1999.
  20. [20] W. L. Waugh and K. J. Tierney, “Emergency Management: Principles and Practice for Local Government,” ICMA Press, 2007.
  21. [21] K. J. Tierney, C. Bevc, and E. Kuligowski, “Metaphors matter: Disaster myths, media frames, and their consequences in Hurricane Katrina,” Annals American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol.604, No.1, pp. 57-81, 2006. https://doi.org/10.1177/0002716205285589
  22. [22] “Collective behavior theory and the study of Mass Hysteria,” R. R. Dynes and K. J. Tierney (Eds.), “Disasters, collective behavior, and social organization,” pp. 207-228, University of Delaware Press, 1994.
  23. [23] R. A. Stallings, “Organizational change and the sociology of disaster,” R. R. Dynes, B. DeMarchi, and C. Pelanda (Eds.), “Sociology of Disasters: Contributions of Sociology to Disaster Research,” pp. 239-257, Franco Angeli, 1987.
  24. [24] R. A. Stallings, “Collective behavior theory and the study of mass hysteria,” R. R. Dynes and K. J. Tierney (Eds.), “Disasters, Collective Behavior, and Social Organization,” pp. 207-228, University of Delaware Press, 1994.
  25. [25] E. Auf der Heide, “Common misconceptions about disasters: Panic, the ‘disaster syndrome,’ and looting,” M. O’Leary (Ed.), “The First 72 Hour: A Community Approach to Disaster Preparedness,” pp. 340-380, iUniverse, 2004.
  26. [26] S. Cutter, “Vulnerability to environmental hazards,” Progress in Human Geography, Vol.20, No.4, pp. 529-539, 1996. https://doi.org/10.1177/030913259602000407
  27. [27] R. K. Merton, “Social structure and anomie,” American Sociological Review, Vol.3, No.5, pp. 672-682, 1938. https://doi.org/10.2307/2084686
  28. [28] R. Agnew, “A general strain theory of community differences in crime rates,” J. of Research in Crime and Delinquency, Vol.36, No.2, pp. 123-155, 1999. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022427899036002001
  29. [29] R. Agnew, “Foundation for a general strain theory of crime,” S. Cote (Ed.), “Criminological Theories: Bridging the Past to the Future,” pp. 113-124, Sage Publications, 2002.
  30. [30] H. Byrd and S. Matthewman, “Exergy and the city: The technology and sociology of power failure,” J. of Urban Technology, Vol.21, No.3, pp. 85-102, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1080/10630732.2014.940706
  31. [31] E. Enarson and B. H. Morrow, “The Gendered Terrain of Disaster: Through Women’s Eyes,” Praeger Publishers, 1998.
  32. [32] P. Jenkins and B. Phillips, “Battered women, catastrophe and the context of safety after Hurricane Katrina,” NWSA J., Vol.20, No.3, pp. 49-68, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1353/ff.2008.a256898
  33. [33] D. Parkinson and C. Zara, “The hidden disaster: Violence in the aftermath of natural disaster,” Australian J. of Emergency Management, Vol.28, No.2, pp. 28-35, 2013.
  34. [34] S. Sohrabizadeh, “A qualitative study of violence against women after the recent disasters of Iran,” Prehospital and Disaster Medicine, Vol.31, No.4, pp. 407-412, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x16000431
  35. [35] B. H. Morrow, “Stretching the bonds: Families of Andrew,” W. G. Peacock and H. Gladwin (Eds.), “Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, Gender, and the Sociology of Disasters,” pp. 141-179, Routledge, 1997.
  36. [36] R. I. Hines, “Natural disasters and gender inequalities: The 2004 tsunami and the case of India,” Race, Gender & Class, Vol.14, Nos.1-2, pp. 60-68, 2007.
  37. [37] S. Rao, “A natural disaster and intimate partner violence: Evidence over time,” Social Science & Medicine, Vol.247, Article No.112804, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.112804
  38. [38] H. T. Keenan, S. T. Marshall, M. A. Nocera, and D. K. Runyan, “Increased incidence of inflicted traumatic brain injury in children after natural disaster,” American J. of Preventive Medicine, Vol.26, No.3, pp. 189-193, 2004. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2003.10.023
  39. [39] E. L. Quarantelli, “Looting and anti-social behavior in disaster,” University of Delaware Disaster Research Center, Preliminary Paper, No.205, 1994.
  40. [40] Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, U.S. Congress, “A failure of initiative: Final report of the select bipartisan committee to investigate the preparation for and response to Hurricane Katrina,” House Report 109-377, 2006. https://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/reports/katrina-lessons-learned/
  41. [41] R. Agnew, “Stability and change in crime over the life-course: A strain theory explanation,” T. Thornberry (Ed.), “Developmental Theories of Crime and Delinquency,” pp. 101-132. Transaction, 1997.
  42. [42] S. Zahran, T. O. Shelley, L. Peek, and S. Brody, “Natural disasters and social order: Modeling crime outcomes in Florida,” Int. J. of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, Vol.27, No.1, pp. 26-52, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1177/028072700902700102
  43. [43] R. A. Stallings, “Methods of Disaster Research,” Xlibris, 2002.
  44. [44] K. Hewitt, “Interpretations of Calamity,” Allen & Unwin, 1983.
  45. [45] B. Wisner, P. Blaikie, T. Cannon, and I. Davis., “At Risk: Natural Hazards, People’s Vulnerability and Disasters,” Routledge, 2014.
  46. [46] S. Cutter, B. J. Boruff, and W. L. Shirley, “Social vulnerability to environmental hazards,” Social Science Quarterly, Vol.84, No.2, pp. 242-261, 2003. https://doi.org/10.1111/1540-6237.8402002
  47. [47] B. H. Morrow, “Identifying and mapping community vulnerability,” Disasters, Vol.23, No.1, pp. 1-18, 1999. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-7717.00102
  48. [48] S. McCarthy-Brown and S. L. Waysdorf, “Katrina disaster family law: The impact of Hurricane Katrina on families and family law,” Indiana Law Review, Vol.42, No.3, pp. 721-765, 2009. https://doi.org/10.18060/4006
  49. [49] U.S. Census Bureau, “AHS 2004 Metropolitan Summary Reports: New Orleans,” 2005. https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/ahs/data/2004/ahs-metropolitan-summary-report.html [Accessed January 16, 2025]
  50. [50] W. Freudenburg, R. Grambling, S. Laska, and K. T. Erikson, “Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina and the Disasters of Tomorrow,” Springer, 2012.
  51. [51] E. Fussell, N. Sastry, and M. Vanlandingham, “Race, socioeconomic status, and return migration to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina,” Population and Environment, Vol.31, Nos.1-3, pp. 20-42, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11111-009-0092-2
  52. [52] U.S. Census Bureau, “Money income in 1977 of households in the United States,” 1978. https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1978/demo/p60-117.html [Accessed February 18, 2025]
  53. [53] M. K. Levitan and S. S. Wieler, “Poverty in New York City 1969–99: The influence of demographic change, income growth, and income inequality,” Economic Policy Review, Vol.14, No.1, pp. 13-30, 2008.
  54. [54] S. Danziger and P. Gottschalk, “America Unequal,” Harvard University Press, 1997.
  55. [55] R. J. Sampson, “The community context of violent crime,” W. J. Wilson (Ed.), “Sociology and the Public Agenda,” pp. 267-274, Sage Publications, 1993.
  56. [56] R. J. Sampson and W. J. Wilson, “Toward a theory of race, crime, and urban inequality,” J. Hagan and R. D. Peterson (Eds.), “Crime and Inequality,” pp. 37-54, Stanford University Press, 1995.
  57. [57] R. Peterson and L. J. Krivo, “Racial segregation, the concentration of disadvantage, and black and white homicide victimization,” Sociological Forum, Vol.14, No.3, pp. 465-493, 1999. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021451703612
  58. [58] R. Park and E. W. Burgess, “The City,” University of Chicago Press, 1925.
  59. [59] Federal Bureau of Investigation, U. S. Department of Justice, “Reported Crimes in the Nation, 2024,” 2025.
  60. [60] A. B. Lemann, “Stronger than the storm: Disaster law in a defiant age,” Louisiana Law Review, Vol.78, Issue 2, pp.438-497, 2018.
  61. [61] K. T. Erikson, “Everything in its Path: Destruction of Community in the Buffalo Creek Flood,” Simon and Schuster, 1976.
  62. [62] Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice, “Crime in the United States, 2004,” 2005.
  63. [63] M. Vanlandingham, “Murder rates in New Orleans, La, 2004–2006,” American J. of Public Health, Vol.97, No.9, pp. 1614-1616, 2007. https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2007.110445
  64. [64] U.S. Department of Justice, “Investigation of the New Orleans Police Department,” 2011. https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/crt/legacy/2011/03/17/nopd_report.pdf [Accessed April 17, 2025]
  65. [65] U.S. Department of Justice, “Homicide analysis report – New York City (NY), 1977,” 1977.
  66. [66] B. Forst, “Improving police effectiveness and transparency: National information needs on law enforcement,” 2008. https://bjs.ojp.gov/sites/g/files/xyckuh236/files/media/document/forst.pdf [Accessed April 22, 2025]
  67. [67] R. Subramanian and L. Arzy, “State policing reforms since George Floyd’s murder. Brennan center for justice,” 2021. https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/state-policing-reforms-george-floyds-murder [Accessed December 2, 2025]
  68. [68] Public Broadcasting Service, “Frontline: Law & Disorder: NOPD’s Long History of Scandal,” August 25, 2010.
  69. [69] L. Moore, “Black Rage in New Orleans: Police Brutality and African-American Activism from World War II to Hurricane Katrina,” Louisiana State University Press, 2010.
  70. [70] D. Czitrom, “The Origins of Corruption in the New York City Police Department,” Time Magazine, 2016. http://time.com/4384963/nypd-scandal-history/ [Accessed December 2, 2025]
  71. [71] The Knapp Commission, “The Knapp Commission Report on Police Corruption,” George Braziller, 1973.
  72. [72] H. Baer and J. P. Armeo, “The mollen commission report: An overview,” New York Law School Law Review, Vol.40, Issue 1, 1995.
  73. [73] Public Broadcasting Service, “NYC in chaos,” 2015. https://www.pbs.org/video/american-experience-blackout-chapter-1/ [Accessed December 2, 2025]
  74. [74] The Disaster Center, “New York crime rates 1960–2019,” 2020. https://www.disastercenter.com/crime/nycrime.htm [Accessed December 2, 2025]
  75. [75] E. M. Gramlich, “The New York City fiscal crisis: What happened and what is to be done?,” American Economic Review, Vol.66, No.2, pp. 415-429, 1976.
  76. [76] S. M. Ehrenhalt, “Economic and demographic change: The case of New York City,” Monthly Labor Review, Vol.116, No.2, pp. 40-50, 1993.
  77. [77] M. Touba, “Lights out! Recalling the 1965 blackout,” The New York Historical, 2015. https://www.nyhistory.org/blogs/lights-out-recalling-the-1965-blackout [Accessed December 15, 2025]
  78. [78] D. C. Hamilton, “The national urban league and New Deal Programs,” Social Service Review, Vol.58, No.2, pp. 227-243, 1984. https://doi.org/10.1086/644189
  79. [79] R. Kessler, S. Galea, M. Gruber, N. A. Sampson, M. Petukhova, and P. S. Wang, “Hurricane Katrina,” Mental Health and Disasters, pp. 419-440, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511730030.025
  80. [80] World Meteorological Organization, “Valuing Weather and Climate: Economic Assessment of Meteorological and Hydrological Services,” 2015. https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/711881495514241685/pdf/Valuing-weather-and-climate-economic-assessment-of-meteorological-and-hydrological-services.pdf
  81. [81] R. Corvin and B. Porter, “Blackout Looting! New York City, July 13, 1977,” Gardner Press, 1979.
  82. [82] P. A. Sorokin, “Man and Society in Calamity: The Effects of War, Revolution, Famine, Pestilence upon the Human Mind, Behavior, Social Organization and Culture Life,” Transaction Publishers, 1942.
  83. [83] U. S. Census Bureau, “Poverty,” 2015. https://www.census.gov/topics/income-poverty/poverty.html [Accessed January 16, 2025]
  84. [84] U.S. Census Bureau, “Baltimore city,” 2015. https://data.census.gov/profile/Baltimore_city [Accessed January 16, 2025]
  85. [85] U.S. Census Bureau, “Historical poverty tables: People and families – 1959 to 2024,” 2025. https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/historical-poverty-people.html [Accessed January 16, 2025]
  86. [86] L. Cohen and M. Felson, “Social change and crime rate trends: A routine activity approach,” American Sociological Review, Vol.44, No.4, pp. 588-608, 1979. https://doi.org/10.2307/2094589
  87. [87] P. Cromwell, R. Dunham, R. Akers, and L. Lanza-Kaduce, “Routine activities and social control in the aftermath of a natural catastrophe,” European J. of Criminal Policy and Research, Vol.3, pp. 56-69, 1995. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02242928
  88. [88] Y. K. Teh, “The abuses and offenses committed during the tsunami crisis,” Asian Criminology, Vol.3, pp. 201-211, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11417-008-9050-7
  89. [89] K. Frailing and D. W. Harper, “School kids and oil rigs: Two more pieces of the post-Katrina puzzle in New Orleans,” American J. of Economics and Sociology, Vol.69, Issue 2, pp.717-735, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1536-7150.2010.00720.x
  90. [90] K. Frailing and D. W. Harper, “Putting Hurricane Sandy in context: Comparing Sandy, Katrina and Gustav,” L. Eargle and A. Esmail (Eds.), “Savage Sand and Surf: The Hurricane Sandy Disaster,” pp. 150-175, University Press of America, 2015.
  91. [91] K. Frailing, D. W. Harper, and R. Serpas, “Changes and challenges in crime and criminal justice after disaster,” American Behavioral Scientist, Vol.59, No.10, pp. 1278-1291, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1177/0002764215591184
  92. [92] K. Frailing, B. Van Brown, and D. W. Harper, “Fundamentals of Criminology: New Dimensions,” 3rd Edition, Carolina Academic Press, 2025.

*This site is desgined based on HTML5 and CSS3 for modern browsers, e.g. Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Opera.

Last updated on Apr. 22, 2026