Amenity Traps and Safety Illusions: The California Camp Fire of 2018
摘要
This chapter analyses the origins of the California Camp Fire of 2018, named after Camp Creek Road in Butte County, and its catastrophic consequences. The death toll of 86 people, mostly residents, made it the worst fire disaster in the US in the last 100 years until the even deadlier wildfire on the Hawaiian Island of Maui in August 2023. Based on the Butte County Grand Jury Camp Fire report of 2020, the Camp Fire Case Studies of the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of 2021 and 2023, and contemporary media coverage, the chapter addresses the paradox that previously recommended measures of risk mitigation were omitted by local and state-level authorities whose commitment to prevention and the protection of lives and property was otherwise credible and strong. The analysis identifies various types of interacting causal mechanisms as both permissive conditions and immediate trigger factors that partly aggravated, partly mitigated the impact of the Camp Fire. Specifically, the chapter sheds light on the ambivalence surrounding social cohesion and resilient local communities with regard to risk mitigation affecting desirable amenities and familiar settlement patterns as well as learning and new alliances in the process of the post-disaster recovery.