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Journal Article

Citation

Benedict BC, Lee S, Jarvis CM, Siebeneck LK, Wolfe R. Disasters 2023; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/disa.12605

PMID

37471176

Abstract

An abundance of unstructured and loosely structured data on disasters exists and can be analyzed using network methods. This paper overviews the use of qualitative data in quantitative social network analysis in disaster research. We discuss two types of networks, each with a relevant major topic in disaster research (i.e., whole network approaches to emergency management networks and personal network approaches to the social support of survivors) and four usable forms of qualitative data. We explain five opportunities afforded by these approaches revolving around their flexibility and ability to account for complex network structures. Next, we present an empirical illustration that extends our previous work examining the sources and types of support and barrier experienced by households during long-term recovery from Superstorm Sandy, wherein we utilized quantitative social network analysis on two qualitative datasets (Lee et al., 2020). We discuss three challenges for these approaches related to the samples, coding, and bias.


Language: en

Keywords

disasters; qualitative data; quantitative analyses; research methods; social network analysis

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