Collective resilience in emergencies and disasters: What can( - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Collective resilience in emergencies and disasters: What can(

Description:

Collective resilience in emergencies and disasters: What can( t) be done to prepare the public John Drury Department of Psychology University of Sussex – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:87
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: AndrewG55
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Collective resilience in emergencies and disasters: What can(


1
Collective resilience in emergencies and
disasters What can(t) be done to prepare the
public
  • John Drury
  • Department of Psychology
  • University of Sussex

2
Collective resilience in emergencies and
disasters
  • Acknowledgements
  • Steve Reicher (St Andrews University)
  • Chris Cocking (London Metropolitan University)
  • Richard Williams (University of Glamorgan)
  • The research referred to in this presentation was
    made possible by a grant from the Economic and
    Social Research Council
  • Ref. no RES-000-23-0446

3
Models of resilience
  • The ability to withstand or recover quickly from
    difficult conditions
  • Policy and practice (resilience embodied in
    institutions, organizational policies for
    emergency preparedness/planning)

4
Models of resilience
  • Disaster research
  • Resilience is the ability of organizations to
    recover from attack and function successfully
    without top-down direction (Dynes, 2003)
  • Factors
  • Informal networks (Tierney, 2002)
  • Provision of resources (Kendra Wachtendorf,
    2001).
  • World Trade Center 2001 emergency services
    improvised forms of coordination, despite loss of
    command and control centre

5
Models of resilience
  • Psychology and psychiatry
  • Personal resilience a persons capacity for
    adapting psychologically, emotionally and
    physically reasonably well and without lasting
    detriment to self, relationships or personal
    development in the face of adversity, threat or
    challenge (NATO guidelines, cited in Williams
    Drury, 2009)
  • Factors
  • Innate and acquired
  • Developmental experiences
  • Repertoires of knowledge
  • Family, peer, school and employment relationships
  • Life events
  • Attachments

6
Models of resilience
  • Collective resilience
  • Concept employed by a number of recent
    researchers (e.g., Almedon, 2005 Kahn, 2005)
    either descriptively
  • Collective resilience refers to the coping
    processes that occur in reference to and
    dependent on a given social context (Hernández,
    2002, p. 334).
  • Or with reference essentially to pre-existing
    social resources (bonds etc.)
  • collective resilience is understood as the
    bonds and networks that hold communities
    together, provides support and protection, and
    facilitates recovery in times of extreme stress,
    as well as resettlement. These social bonds are
    variously referred to as social networks,
    community facilities and activities, active
    citizenship, or social capital. .... It refers to
    groups of traumatised people whose old
    communities have been destroyed and who are
    learning to survive in a new world, where
    community may be non-existent, new or emerging,
    or multiple. (Fielding Anderson, 2008, p. 7
    emphasis added)
  • (Although also a hint here of emergence)

7
Collective resilience A social psychological
model
  • Shared identity (psychological unity) ?
  • We trust and expect others to be supportive,
    practically and emotionally
  • in turn, reduces anxiety and stress
  • Shared definition of reality (legitimacy,
    possibility)
  • In turn, allows co-ordination
  • In turn, enhances agency/power (the ability to
    organize the world around us to minimize the
    risks of being exposed to further trauma)
  • Allows us to feel collective ownership of the
    plans and goals we make together
  • Encourages us to express solidarity and cohesion
  • Makes us see each others plight as our own and
    hence give support sometimes at a cost to our own
    personal safety

8
Collective resilience (Drury, Cocking,
Reicher, 2009a, b Williams Drury, 2009)
  • Model derived from 20 years of social identity
    research on group processes, organizational and
    health behaviour (e.g. Haslam, 2004 Haslam et
    al., 2009 Turner et al., 1987)
  • Origins of shared identity and hence collective
    resilience
  • (i) existing group memberships e.g.
    communities
  • (ii) emergent group memberships ad hoc crowds
  • Novel claims of this approach
  • The concept of resilience can be applied to
    unstructured, ad hoc collectives (crowds) not
    just organizations
  • Hence doesnt assume there needs to be existing
    bonds / networks etc.
  • Being part of a psychological crowd can
    contribute to personal survival in an emergency
    (the crowd as an adaptive mechanism)

9
7th July 2005 London bombings(Cocking, Drury,
Reicher, 2009b)
  • Four bombs, 56 deaths, 700 injuries.
  • Emergency services
  • didnt reach all
  • the survivors
  • Immediately.

10
Data
  • Contemporaneous newspaper accounts 141
  • Personal (archive) accounts 127
  • Primary data interviews and written e-mail
    responses 17
  • Total 146() witnesses, 90 of whom were
    survivors
  • Material coded and counted panic, help versus
    selfishness, threat of death, affiliation, unity

11
Non-adaptive panic or adaptive order?
  • It took about twenty twenty-five minutes before
    we got out and some people were really itching
    to get off the train so more people the more
    agitated people were not being shaken up they
    felt they were, even though they wanted to get
    off at the same time so it was quite a calm calm
    evenly dispersed evacuation there wasnt people
    running down the train screaming their heads
    off. It was very calm and obviously there was
    people crying but generally most sort of
    people were really calm in that situation, which
    I found amazing.
  • (LB 1)

12
Helping versus personal selfishness
  • (Helping giving reassurance, sharing water,
    pulling people from the wreckage, supporting
    people up as they evacuated, make-shift bandages
    and tourniquets)

13
  • I remember walking towards the stairs and at the
    top of the stairs there was a guy coming from the
    other direction. I remember him kind of
    gesturing kind of politely that I should go in
    front- you first that. And I was struck I
    thought, God even in a situation like this
    someone has kind of got manners, really.
  • (LB 11)

14
  • I didnt see any uncooperative activity, I just
    saw some people who were so caught up in their
    own feelings that they were kind of more focused
    on themselves but I didnt see anyone who was
    uncooperative. I didnt see any bad behavior
  • (LB 4)

15
Accounting for help
16
Accounting for help
17
  • Interview accounts
  • unity
  • together
  • similarity
  • affinity
  • part of a group
  • everybody, didnt matter what colour or
    nationality
  • you thought these people knew each other
  • teamnesssic
  • warmness
  • vague solidity
  • empathy

18
  • Int can you say how much unity there was on a
    scale of one to ten?
  • LB 1 Id say it was very high Id say it was
    seven or eight out of ten.
  • Int Ok and comparing to before the blast
    happened what do you think the unity was like
    before?
  • LB 1 Id say very low- three out of ten, I mean
    you dont really think about unity in a normal
    train journey, it just doesnt happen you just
    want to get from A to B, get a seat maybe
  • (LB 1)

19
  • Explaining shared identity (unity) in London
    bombings
  • Survivors were mostly commuters
  • We-ness was emergent
  • Almost all who referred to unity referred to
    common fate to shared danger
  • Sounds like Blitz spirit?
  • As has been noted - Disasters bring people
    together (Fritz, 1968 Clarke, 2002)
  • The psych mechanism Common fate is a criterion
    for social identification (Turner et al., 1987)

20
Implications
  • IF shared identity can arise from the emergency
    or disaster itself, then collective resilience is
    endogenous, in human nature
  • Disaster planning and policy needs to take this
    into account or risk undermining it!
  • This argument in line with that made by a number
    of sociologists and disaster psychiatrists (e.g.,
    Dynes, Furedi, Wessely, Glass Schoch-Spana)

21
Implications for disaster planning
  • Not protecting a psychologically vulnerable
    public (by withholding information) but
    organizing adequate communication plans
  • Less anxiety, more efficacy and more empowerment
    the more information
  • The modern discrepancy between getting
    (surveillance) versus giving information
    technologies needs to be questioned
  • BUT! communication requires trust

22
Implications for disaster planning
  • 2. Understanding the crowd as a resource not a
    (psycho-social) problem
  • Example London bombs survivors acted as fourth
    emergency service
  • Catering for the public desire to help, allowing
    the public to be involved in its own protection

23
Implications for disaster planning
  • 3. Facilitating collective independence
  • Information
  • Practical, material resources are empowering
  • Emotional guidance (dont panic) and
    treatment (expert post-trauma counselling)
  • (i) presuppose a dependent, passive public
  • (ii) reproduce a perceived relationship of
    inequality and alienation
  • (iii) hence will encounter resentment,
    hostility and resistance

24
Summary and conclusions
  • Resilience is a key concept
  • Model of collective resilience based on social
    psychological principles
  • If correct then we need to understand the bases
    and consequences of resilience in human responses
    to disasters
  • Emergency planning and preparedness needs to take
    account of these natural bases to facilitate
    (rather than undermine) resilience.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com