Housing recovery outcomes after typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines: a critical realist perspective

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Abstract

Typhoon Haiyan damaged around a million houses in the Philippines in November 2013. It especially affected the poor. Using a realist laminated ontology, this paper explains how multiple causal mechanisms triggered unexpected outcomes in the housing recovery programme in the province of Leyte. The proposed causal mechanisms were: the intentional causal agency of the Filipino power elite; the collaboration–competition dilemma among individual agents and social structures; the constraints faced by the National Housing Authority with regards to procurement and budget; unfreedoms for resilient resettlement; secondary side effects of land and resettlement policies; and the under the table practice of bribery. The combination of these multiple causal mechanisms generated emergent outcomes such as low output of permanent post-disaster housing, generic housing solutions that cannot be extended, reproduction of pre-disaster vulnerabilities, recovery of valuable land by the Filipino elite and allocation of public funding to a limited range of recipients.

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Arroyo, I., & Åstrand, J. (2019). Housing recovery outcomes after typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines: a critical realist perspective. Journal of Critical Realism, 18(2), 142–168. https://doi.org/10.1080/14767430.2019.1605667

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