Modeling Resource Network Relationships Between Response Organizations and Affected Neighborhoods After a Technological Disaster

Chih-Hui Lai*, Chen-Chao Tao, Yu Chung Cheng

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Disaster usually provides a good opportunity to observe the convergence of voluntary organized response efforts. However, the extent to which response organizations and affected neighborhoods go through the relief process similarly or differently is surprisingly less studied. Integrating the framework of community ecology and the concept of community resilience, this study examines the evolutionary process of an emergent disaster response community that consists of the populations of response organizations and affected neighborhoods. Using a technological disaster that occurred in Taiwan in July 2014 as the research context, this study shows that response organizations’ resource provision network and affected neighborhoods’ resource receipt network exhibited similar structural tendencies over the phases of disaster response and rebuilding. The process of mutual resource mobilization was also observed as response organizations mobilized and provided resources to affected neighborhoods at the same time. Moreover, while affected neighborhoods tended to maintain their resource relationships consistently over time, the changing structural patterns of their resource network reflected individual engagement in resuming normality after the incident. Theoretical and practical implications for emergent post-disaster social and voluntary behavior are discussed through the lens of community ecology and community resilience.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)2145-2175
Number of pages31
JournalVoluntas
Volume28
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2017

Keywords

  • Community resilience
  • Disaster response
  • Ecological and evolutionary perspective
  • Resource network
  • Social network analysis

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