After the fire: An ecological, phenomenological exploration of resilience-building following the Fuego volcanic eruption in Guatemala

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Abstract

Combining ecological resilience theory with a phenomenological epistemology, we explored experiential, social, and cultural factors mediating resilience-building with participants from a village destroyed by the 2018 Fuego volcanic eruption in Guatemala. The purpose of the study is to find out what strategies displaced families and communities employ for living through the aftermath of a volcano eruption and for building psychological resilience. We conducted semistructured interviews with nine survivors of the Fuego eruption, now relocated and coping with the loss of community and family members killed in the disaster. Interpretive phenomenological analysis was used to analyze transcripts. The analysis produced four main themes: (i) individual and collective challenges, (ii) social support and protection, (iii) faith and culturally endorsed belief, and (iv) looking to the future. As well as learning more about how a community faced challenges presented by a volcano eruption, the current study has a degree of transferability, with implications for understanding how other communities experience and cope with such events.

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APA

Oldfield, J., & Stevenson, A. (2024). After the fire: An ecological, phenomenological exploration of resilience-building following the Fuego volcanic eruption in Guatemala. American Journal of Community Psychology, 74(1–2), 86–99. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajcp.12748

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