Disaster recovery experiences of a South African rural farming community
Date
2015Author
Becker, Herman Christiaan Johannes
Roos, Vera
Coetzee, Hendrik Christiaan
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study explored the bush fire disaster experiences and coping of South African farmers. Participants consisted of seven male farmers (6 = White Afrikaans-speaking; 1 = Black Tswana-speaking). Data were collected using semi-structured interviews, nine months after the disaster, and analysed thematically. The findings showed that the farmers’ recovery was characterised by three distinct, transitioning phases. The first period involved resource-maintenance coping and emotion-focused coping. The second time period was characterised by meaning making related strategies. Finally, the third time period was charactirised by anxiety over reoccurrence and resource-maintenance coping. The results also suggest that successful coping is reliant on the individual's ability to adapt coping strategies continually, in a context-appropriate manner.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/20410http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14330237.2015.1065051
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]