Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events

Abstract This paper aims to explain survey findings regarding disaster recovery processes among ethnic groups in a rural Texas community. The research was conducted over a 4-year period with most of the survey data collected over the summer of 2004. The research was descriptive in nature, attempting...

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Main Authors: Kim B. Galindo, Zohreh R. Eslami, Hassan Bashir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of International Humanitarian Action
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41018-018-0047-2
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spelling doaj-e43bcc1f90c444b8b8804faeb2edfab82020-11-25T00:05:18ZengSpringerOpenJournal of International Humanitarian Action2364-34122364-34042018-11-013111710.1186/s41018-018-0047-2Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster eventsKim B. Galindo0Zohreh R. Eslami1Hassan Bashir2Texas A&M University, Education City Student CenterTexas A&M University, Education City Student CenterTexas A&M University, Education City Student CenterAbstract This paper aims to explain survey findings regarding disaster recovery processes among ethnic groups in a rural Texas community. The research was conducted over a 4-year period with most of the survey data collected over the summer of 2004. The research was descriptive in nature, attempting to document processes and sources of recovery aid acquisition following a natural disaster, and viewed through the lens of cultural and ethnic literature regarding minorities and disaster recovery processes. The difficulty in explaining research findings comes from the fact that data was collected at the household level, yet the explanations which best elucidate the findings are derived from a different level of analysis than that of the survey. The variation in aid acquisition between ethnic groups is best understood as a manifestation of community cultural norms, which implies both individual, cognitive norms, as well as social norms. Ethnic literature focused on minorities in disaster situations, excerpts from qualitative data, and personal observations are used to support the interpretation of the data presented herein pointing to cultural flexibility in recovery processes, which are stifled by institutional barriers hampering recovery efficiencies.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41018-018-0047-2Housing recoveryCultureFloodDisasterMinoritiesRural
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kim B. Galindo
Zohreh R. Eslami
Hassan Bashir
spellingShingle Kim B. Galindo
Zohreh R. Eslami
Hassan Bashir
Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
Journal of International Humanitarian Action
Housing recovery
Culture
Flood
Disaster
Minorities
Rural
author_facet Kim B. Galindo
Zohreh R. Eslami
Hassan Bashir
author_sort Kim B. Galindo
title Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
title_short Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
title_full Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
title_fullStr Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
title_full_unstemmed Culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
title_sort culture’s influence on social network vulnerabilities for ethnic minorities in rural disaster events
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of International Humanitarian Action
issn 2364-3412
2364-3404
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract This paper aims to explain survey findings regarding disaster recovery processes among ethnic groups in a rural Texas community. The research was conducted over a 4-year period with most of the survey data collected over the summer of 2004. The research was descriptive in nature, attempting to document processes and sources of recovery aid acquisition following a natural disaster, and viewed through the lens of cultural and ethnic literature regarding minorities and disaster recovery processes. The difficulty in explaining research findings comes from the fact that data was collected at the household level, yet the explanations which best elucidate the findings are derived from a different level of analysis than that of the survey. The variation in aid acquisition between ethnic groups is best understood as a manifestation of community cultural norms, which implies both individual, cognitive norms, as well as social norms. Ethnic literature focused on minorities in disaster situations, excerpts from qualitative data, and personal observations are used to support the interpretation of the data presented herein pointing to cultural flexibility in recovery processes, which are stifled by institutional barriers hampering recovery efficiencies.
topic Housing recovery
Culture
Flood
Disaster
Minorities
Rural
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41018-018-0047-2
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AT hassanbashir culturesinfluenceonsocialnetworkvulnerabilitiesforethnicminoritiesinruraldisasterevents
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