4.6 Article

Hierarchies of affectedness after disasters

期刊

HEALTH & PLACE
卷 72, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2021.102687

关键词

Disaster; Disaster recovery; Hierarchies of affectedness; Disaster impacts; Resilience

资金

  1. Australian Postgraduate Award

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Disasters have a significant impact on the health and well-being of those affected, creating hierarchies of affectedness that influence recovery trajectories and health outcomes. Research shows that these hierarchies are negotiated among impacted individuals, others in the same community, and outsiders, resulting in varied effects on disaster-affected individuals.
Disasters result in a range of impacts that significantly disrupt the health and wellbeing of those affected. After disasters, a hierarchy of affectedness may be explicitly or implicitly developed, where those affected are compared to each other, and to people affected by disasters in other locations. When an individual's sense of place is so significantly disrupted, these hierarchies are critical to improving the understanding of recovery trajectories, including mental health and well-being outcomes. These hierarchies have practical implications that influence the health outcomes of those affected, including eligibility for disaster aid, support services, and the way that people affected by disasters relate to others in their community. This paper expands the 'hierarchy of affectedness' concept coined by Andersen (2013) using findings from a qualitative study in Australia and New Zealand. Using a letter writing research method, twenty people who had been impacted by a range of disasters in different locations described what they considered helpful and unhelpful in the recovery. One emergent finding in this study was that hierarchies of affectedness are negotiated between impacted individuals, others affected in the same community, and outsiders. These hierarchies served as a helpful sense-making tool for some people impacted by disasters, while causing considerable secondary stress for others. Based on these findings, we offer an expansion to Andersen's existing model of hierarchies of affectedness in post-disaster settings.

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