在自然之怒的熔炉中创造:1991-2010年加利福尼亚州自然灾害后的协会多样性与地方社会创业

Creating in the Crucibles of Nature’s Fury: Associational Diversity and Local Social Entrepreneurship after Natural Disasters in California, 1991–2010

ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY · 2016
被引 105
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了1990-2010年加州各县自然灾害后人类服务组织的创立情况,发现社区协会多样性越丰富,越能有效建立集体物品组织来应对灾害,且这种多样性在灾害更复杂时尤为重要。

Abstract

This paper examines foundings of human services organizations after natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes, wildfires, hurricanes, and tsunamis and explains why only some communities bounce back by founding appropriate collective-goods organizations. Using natural disasters in California counties from 1990 to 2010 as shocks that exogenously impose a need for collective goods over and above the level endogenous to the community, this paper shows that a geographic community’s local organizing capacity rests on the richness of its repertoire of voluntary organizing models as reflected in the diversity of its voluntary associations. Such diversity is even more critical when the type of natural disaster is more unexpected or complex (e.g., both a wildfire and an earthquake) in an area, and the organizational challenges posed are thus more novel for the community. Associational diversity has positive effects on both the numbers and aggregate size of foundings of local (non-branch, secular) human services organizations, and the effects are generalizable to other endogenous demand conditions such as poverty. Results also show how different kinds of variety can have opposing effects on organizing capacity after a disaster, with associational diversity having a positive effect, political diversity having a negative effect, and racial diversity having no significant effect, net of other factors. The paper concludes with a call for treating community resilience as a matter of enhancing local organizing capacity over centralized planning efforts when the environment is rapidly changing.

社会创业自然灾害社区韧性组织多样性集体行动