Hazard Risk Resilience Magazine Volume 1 Issue1 | Page 11

11 Usage of ‘tipping point’ in academic journals from 1957 - 2009 Bhatanacharoen P, Greatbatch D and Clark, T. ‘The Tipping Point of the ‘Tipping Point’ Metaphor: Agency and process for waves of change’. http://wp.me/p13wbQ-6r ‘Metropolitan Segregation’ published in Scientific American in 1957. Tipping Point first became popularised by Malcolm Gladwell in his book The Tipping Point. The birth of tipping point What is it about metaphors that make them stick and what allows them to continue long after their first use? In order for a metaphor to be used in different ways it needs to be grounded in some commonality, but be loose enough to describe a diverse variety of things. As words travel from person to person and culture to culture they often transform into something else; they create something new for the people that use them. This brings into question to what degree words themselves actually affect us and whether they influence the world in really big ways, which brings us to ‘tipping point’. In the social sciences, the story of tipping point begins in the US when it was coined by a sociologist named Mortin Grodzins in 1957 who published a study from the University of Chicago called ‘Metropolitan Segregation’ in the journal Scientific American. In this study, Grodzins described what is known today as ‘white-flight’ – when white people leave a neighbourhood after a certain number of black people move in. Grodzins called this social phenomenon a ‘tip point’, which would later evolve into ‘tipping point’. This was the first time tipping point was used formally in sociology. Grodzins actually picked up the term ‘tip point’ from urban planners and other housing professionals who observed how a certain percentage of black people (30 percent) would cause the neighbourhood to ‘tip over’ and become all black. Researchers in the Tipping Points project were the first to come upon this interesting finding that provided a clue to how words (including the ideas they refer to) spread. A study led by social scientists Dr Pojanath Bhatanacharoen, Prof David Greatbatch and Prof Tim Clark did a citation analysis that searched for academic articles that used the term tipping point, but it also went a bit further than that. The problem with citation analysis alone is that it doesn’t give you an accurate measure for how words actually spread. Researchers used an alternative approach known as ‘discourse analysis’. This of course contains another puzzling term – ‘discourse’. To put it briefly, discourse often refers to discussion or speech, something that has been said. However, discourse can also imply much more than this in academic literature, as it refers to people’s representation of the world that is made up of ideas and concepts they have acquired socially over time. “Discourse analysis is a plethora of approaches which is based upon the premise that social realities are constructed through language”, says Bhatanacharoen. Events, people or things represented in the media from newspapers to film and the internet are often framed in different ways creating new realities of what they appear to be. For example, wellknown political leaders are framed as tyrants, liberators, or even fools through different kinds of media discourse. Discourse analysis can provide a much deeper understanding of how tipping point and other terms are used within and outside of their respective contexts because, as we know, tipping point is not limited to only one context and can be interpreted in many different ways. Like plants and animals, words do not grow in isolation, which is why discourse is important to finding out how they evolve and are copied over time. The research team are looking at how urban planners themselves first started using ‘tip point’, and how it began outside of academia as well as how researchers that use tipping point reference each other. ‘This helps us to understand what features of the term make it plastic and so enable it to travel between very different discourse communities’, says Clark. What makes tipping point unique is that its recent usage by academics from a range of different fields originates not with an obscurely known sociologist from the 1950s, but a journalist with the New Yorker by the name of Malcolm Gladwell. It was Malcolm Gladwell’s book The Tipping Point: How little things can make a big difference that led a diverse variety of researchers in medicine, sociology, climate science and many other fields to use the term ‘tipping point’. Since 2000, when The Tipping Point was first published, the metaphor’s use sky rocketed and it literally became a buzz word over night. Tipping Points researchers discovered that in some cases the only thing that academic studies using tipping point had in common was referencing Gladwell’s book. Before Gladwell, this term appears to be virtually non-existent in scientists’ and humanities researchers’ fields and suddenly it is part of their regular vocabulary. How could this happen so quickly and will it continue this way or will tipping point eventually go the way of the dinosaur as many metaphors before it? In order to find out, the Tipping Points project, along with other researchers from around the world, are studying how ideas spread both socially and culturally.