Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability: The Local Post-Disaster Dynamics of Extreme Environmental Events
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Background: Extreme Events and Local Vulnerability
2.1. Framing Disasters
2.2. Therapeutic and Corrosive Communities
3. Research Design
3.1. The Case: The Largest Forest Fire in Modern Swedish History
3.2. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. What Were the Effects on Social Cohesion?
I also think that the positive thing is, this feeling, a feeling of “we” in the entire community. At least during the fire, it was amazing … That’s probably what struck me the most, that everyone helped out (15 December 2014).
At the local level, I have to say it was incredible, if you look at the resources, volunteer resources that were out there. If you were out driving, there were farmers who joined together. I visited a farm and they had like put out beds, there was food, all the tractors stood there, they really joined together and helped out. So I must say this was fantastic (26 May 2015).
It’s like the whole community says that there’s a new spirit in the whole community, we talk to each other more … People talk to each other in a different way. So that’s been good. At the very least, the generosity of the people around one, that’s amazing (cottager, 29 April 2015).
It has changed a hell of a lot, even between neighbours. There was a hell of a surge of support in the village, you could say, you’d never have believed it (private forest owner, 15 April 2015).
But then, something happens, I don’t know, it’s hard to explain. For the cohesion of the community and its villages. Someone wrote a letter to the editor: this is the grumpiest community in Sweden, what’s happening? How can people start talking to each other? We have farms in the villages where they’ve been feuding for three generations. Now they went and made firebreaks together, sat and had coffee, they gave some gibes to each other but still they talked to each other … So, that’s what I think is the most fascinating thing about all this. I tell people, if they ask, that if they’re enemies you damn well need a wildfire so that you can get along (9 January 2015).
4.2. Perceived Causes of Social Cohesion
I only had one objective from the start, it was that no one should kill themselves. We had two concerts at the church and the last thing I said was “if you don’t have anything else to do, take some coffee and pastries and visit those who you don’t see during the days, because they’re the ones who are at risk.” Sitting in the bush alone and pondering, unable to think straight and who don’t say a word, because they’re the ones who, they are at greatest risk. Those who talk a lot are at lower risk (representative of the Federation of Swedish Family Forest Owners, 9 January 2015).
The willingness to volunteer during the fire has meant that neighbourliness has increased and that you care more about each other and some old conflicts have almost been resolved, too, because, well, you’ve had no other alternative than to help each other and then perhaps you realized that you only benefit from, well, helping each other (representative of the Federation of Swedish Family Forest Owners, 20 January 2015).
Thus, you can see a positive social thing, that the landowners who are in this area, they have gotten a completely different point of contact, that they’ve become much more sociable with each other, they meet and talk and it’s like, you need to talk again and again. And at the evenings that we have organized around the theme of forest regeneration we see that there are a lot of other issues that come up also … So it’s a social thing, there’s more social coherence in the community, so to speak, you can keep an eye on each other better (regional representative of the Forest Agency, 16 October 2014).
5. Discussion: Why Was There No Social Corrosion?
5.1. What Is the Reason for This Positive Evaluation of the Disaster?
5.2. Why Does Everyone Tell the Same Story?
5.3. Conclusion: Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Therapeutic Community | Corrosive Community | |
---|---|---|
Cause of disaster | Nature | Society |
Biophysical and/or health consequences | Distinct | Ambiguous |
Responsibility | Not central | Central |
View of authorities and institutions | Trustworthy | Untrustworthy |
Community consequences | Social cohesion | Social disintegration |
Statement | Count | Percent | Accum. Percent |
---|---|---|---|
Agree | 339 | 45.4% | 57% |
Partly agree | 158 | 21.2% | 26.6% |
Disagree | 98 | 13.1% | 16.5% |
Don’t know or No answer | 151 | 20.2% | |
Total | 746 | 100% |
Statement | Count | Percent | Accum. Percent |
---|---|---|---|
Agree | 321 | 43.0% | 50.2% |
Partly agree | 204 | 27.3% | 31.9% |
Disagree | 115 | 15.4% | 18.0% |
Don’t know or No answer | 106 | 14.2% | |
Total | 746 | 100% |
Statement | Percent | Count | Accum. Percent |
---|---|---|---|
The forest fire has not personally caused me any losses | 29.2% | 218 | 29.2% |
I am not able to pick mushrooms or berries anymore, or to fish or hunt in the area | 18.2% | 135 | 47.4% |
The opportunity to have experiences close to nature is gone | 15.4% | 115 | 62.8% |
The burned forest is horrible to look at/the forest is gone | 11.8% | 88 | 74.6% |
Worry about new fires/Psychological problems/PTSD/Grief/Lasting sense of insecurity | 10.8% | 81 | 85.4% |
Loss of economic value | 6.0% | 45 | 91.4% |
Other | 2.7% | 20 | 94.1% |
Don’t know/No answer | 5.9% | 44 | 100% |
Total | 100% | 746 |
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Lidskog, R. Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability: The Local Post-Disaster Dynamics of Extreme Environmental Events. Sustainability 2018, 10, 4457. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124457
Lidskog R. Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability: The Local Post-Disaster Dynamics of Extreme Environmental Events. Sustainability. 2018; 10(12):4457. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124457
Chicago/Turabian StyleLidskog, Rolf. 2018. "Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability: The Local Post-Disaster Dynamics of Extreme Environmental Events" Sustainability 10, no. 12: 4457. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124457
APA StyleLidskog, R. (2018). Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability: The Local Post-Disaster Dynamics of Extreme Environmental Events. Sustainability, 10(12), 4457. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124457