Difference between revisions of "Cromdal-Persson-Thunqvist-Osvaldsson2012"

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|Title=“SOS 112 what has occurred?” Managing openings in children's emergency calls
 
|Title=“SOS 112 what has occurred?” Managing openings in children's emergency calls
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Emergency Calls; Children; Opening sequences;
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Emergency Calls; Children; Opening sequences;
|Key=Cromdal2012b
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|Key=Cromdal-Persson-Thunqvist-Osvaldsson2012
 
|Year=2012
 
|Year=2012
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|Language=English
 
|Journal=Discourse, Context & Media
 
|Journal=Discourse, Context & Media
 
|Volume=1
 
|Volume=1

Latest revision as of 01:25, 11 July 2018

Cromdal-Persson-Thunqvist-Osvaldsson2012
BibType ARTICLE
Key Cromdal-Persson-Thunqvist-Osvaldsson2012
Author(s) Jakob Cromdal, Daniel Persson-Thunqvist, Karin Osvaldsson
Title “SOS 112 what has occurred?” Managing openings in children's emergency calls
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Emergency Calls, Children, Opening sequences
Publisher
Year 2012
Language English
City
Month
Journal Discourse, Context & Media
Volume 1
Number 4
Pages 183–202
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.dcm.2012.10.002
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This article examines the initial exchanges in calls to the Swedish emergency services, focusing on callers’ responses to the standardised opening phrase SOS one one two, what has occurred?. Comparisons across three age groups – children, teenagers, and adults – revealed significant differences in caller behaviour. Whereas teenagers and adults offered reports of the incident, child callers were more prone to request dispatch of specific assistance units. This pattern was only observable when children were accompanied by an adult relative, which leads us to propose that child callers may be operating under prior adult instruction concerning how to request help. The second part of the analysis examines the local organisation of participants’ actions, showing how turn-design and sequencing manifest the local concerns of the two parties. The analysis thus combines quantitative and qualitative methods to explore the ways through which the parties jointly produce an early sense of emergency incidents. These results are discussed in terms of children’s agency and competence as informants granted to them by emergency operators, and how such competence ascriptions run against commonsense conceptualisations of children as less-than-full-fledged members of society.

Notes