TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of social capital, personal networks, and emergency responders in post-disaster recovery and resilience
T2 - a study of rural communities in Indiana
AU - Sadri, Arif Mohaimin
AU - Ukkusuri, Satish V.
AU - Lee, Seungyoon
AU - Clawson, Rosalee
AU - Aldrich, Daniel
AU - Nelson, Megan Sapp
AU - Seipel, Justin
AU - Kelly, Daniel
N1 - Acknowledgements This study was funded by an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant to Purdue University to address grand challenges through supporting interdisciplinary collaborations, especially between the liberal arts and STEM disciplines. The second and third authors’ work is partially funded by the NSF grant 1638311. The authors are grateful for this support. The authors would also like to acknowledge two students from Courtney Page of Purdue University, Indiana, and Pedro Henrique dos Reis Rezende of FUMEC University, Brazil, for their participation in the earlier part of the project. The authors are also grateful to the reviewers’ valuable comments, which improved the manuscript. However, the authors are solely responsible for the findings presented in this study.
PY - 2018/2/1
Y1 - 2018/2/1
N2 - The factors that explain the speed of recovery after disaster remain contested. While many have argued that physical infrastructure, social capital, and disaster damage influence the arc of recovery, empirical studies that test these various factors within a unified modeling framework are few. We conducted a mail survey to collect data on household recovery in four small towns in southern Indiana that were hit by deadly tornadoes in March 2012. The recovery effort is ongoing; while many of the homes, businesses, and community facilities were rebuilt in 2013, some are still under construction. We investigate how households in these communities are recovering from damage that they experienced and the role of social capital, personal networks, and assistance from emergency responders on the overall recovery experience. We used an ordered probit modeling framework to test the combined as well as relative effects of (a) damage to physical infrastructures (houses, vehicles, etc.); (b) recovery assistance from emergency responders (FEMA) as well as friends and neighbors; (c) personal network characteristics (size, network density, proximity, length of relationship); (d) social capital (civic engagement, contact with neighbors, trust); and (e) household characteristics. Results show that while households with higher levels of damage experienced slower recovery, those with recovery assistance from neighbors, stronger personal networks, and higher levels of social capital experienced faster recovery. The insights gained in this study will enable emergency managers and disaster response personnel to implement targeted strategies in facilitating post-disaster recovery and community resilience.
AB - The factors that explain the speed of recovery after disaster remain contested. While many have argued that physical infrastructure, social capital, and disaster damage influence the arc of recovery, empirical studies that test these various factors within a unified modeling framework are few. We conducted a mail survey to collect data on household recovery in four small towns in southern Indiana that were hit by deadly tornadoes in March 2012. The recovery effort is ongoing; while many of the homes, businesses, and community facilities were rebuilt in 2013, some are still under construction. We investigate how households in these communities are recovering from damage that they experienced and the role of social capital, personal networks, and assistance from emergency responders on the overall recovery experience. We used an ordered probit modeling framework to test the combined as well as relative effects of (a) damage to physical infrastructures (houses, vehicles, etc.); (b) recovery assistance from emergency responders (FEMA) as well as friends and neighbors; (c) personal network characteristics (size, network density, proximity, length of relationship); (d) social capital (civic engagement, contact with neighbors, trust); and (e) household characteristics. Results show that while households with higher levels of damage experienced slower recovery, those with recovery assistance from neighbors, stronger personal networks, and higher levels of social capital experienced faster recovery. The insights gained in this study will enable emergency managers and disaster response personnel to implement targeted strategies in facilitating post-disaster recovery and community resilience.
KW - Emergency responders
KW - Ordered probit
KW - Personal networks
KW - Post-disaster recovery
KW - Resilience
KW - Social capital
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U2 - 10.1007/s11069-017-3103-0
DO - 10.1007/s11069-017-3103-0
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85033391429
SN - 0921-030X
VL - 90
SP - 1377
EP - 1406
JO - Natural Hazards
JF - Natural Hazards
IS - 3
ER -