放置附件
社会资本
心理健康
心理学
身份(音乐)
自然灾害
社会认同理论
社会心理学
社会支持
地理
社会学
精神科
社会团体
社会科学
物理
气象学
声学
作者
Amber Jones,Iain Walker
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.wss.2023.100179
摘要
Natural disasters have significant psychological impacts, yet people's connection to disaster-affected places remains underexplored. Studies using place attachment models to understand psychological disaster impact have yielded inconsistent findings. This study developed Identity Process Theory (IPT) to better explain post-disaster wellbeing and mental health outcomes. Social connection (social capital) was predicted to buffer negative psychological disaster impacts for highly place-connected people. We also developed a novel scale to address a major gap in existing IPT literature: measurement of identity threat. A survey was administered to people from small townships (N = 111) affected by a major bushfire in NSW, Australia, in 2019-2020. Identity threat accounted for wellbeing and mental health outcomes better than did place attachment. Stronger identity threat was associated with poorer outcomes. Partial support was found for the moderating function of social capital. These findings support the importance of connection to place and IPT's utility in disaster contexts. This has important implications for environmental psychologists and disaster recovery efforts.
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