Positioning the Sense of Coherence (SOC) in Disaster Recovery Planning and Design
Cornelius Ayodele Ojo, Traci Rose Rider

TL;DR
This paper explores how the sense of coherence can be used to improve disaster recovery planning and design by enhancing human resilience.
Contribution
It introduces a framework integrating Antonovsky’s SOC and COR theory for disaster recovery planning.
Findings
Post-disaster recovery is a critical time for addressing community vulnerabilities.
An interdisciplinary approach is needed to capture human experiences in disasters.
SOC and COR theory can guide more effective disaster recovery policies.
Abstract
“Whence the strength?” This compelling question, posed by Aaron Antonovsky in 1979, sets the stage for understanding the role of sense of coherence (SOC), a human-focused psychosocial concept, in fostering resilience amidst escalating climate-induced disasters such as hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes. This paper is the first step in a larger research agenda aimed at exploring how the human experience of disasters, guided by Antonovsky’s SOC framework, can be better integrated into disaster recovery planning and design, laying the theoretical foundation for subsequent studies. This paper examines which supports help people stay resilient during disasters, focusing on the role of SOC in recovery. By integrating Antonovsky’s SOC concept with Hobfoll’s Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, it also draws from other published works on stress and disaster recovery to explore how disaster…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, psychology, and well-being · Disaster Management and Resilience · Disaster Response and Management
