4.3 Article

Evolving social capital and networks in the post-disaster rebuilding process: The case of Typhoon Yolanda

Journal

ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT
Volume 62, Issue 1, Pages 56-71

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/apv.12268

Keywords

patron– client relations; politics of aid; social capital; trust; Typhoon Yolanda

Funding

  1. ESRC [ES/M008932/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This article explores the impact of Typhoon Yolanda on the Philippines communities and social structures, as well as the role of different types of social capital in post-disaster coping strategies. It evaluates the complexity of defining social capital in a disaster context, particularly the blurring of bridging and linking social capital in the immediate stage of rehabilitation. The study deduces the necessary social capital strategies for a speedy recovery process for disaster-affected communities.
Typhoon Yolanda brought major devastation to the local communities and infrastructure and also reshaped social structures and networks in the Philippines. During the immediate recovery process, bridging, bonding and linking social capital have had differential impacts and outcomes on how communities cope with the aftermath of the disaster. This article investigates the interplay between the various types of social capital and their contributions to immediate coping strategies of Typhoon Yolanda communities. This article also evaluates the complexity of defining social capital in a disaster context. In particular, it unpacks the blurring of the bridging and linking social capital at the immediate stage of rehabilitation in a post-disaster context and its impacts on the social fabric of the communities. We deduce from this case study the social capital strategies necessary for a speedy recovery process both economically and socially for disaster-affected communities.

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