Matthewman, SMayeda, DUekusa, Shinya2019-01-112018http://hdl.handle.net/2292/45091Drawing upon Bourdieu's theories - capital, field and habitus - this cross-national study qualitatively explores how immigrants and refugees, who are linguistic minorities, experienced the 2010-2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disasters. This includes their perceived social vulnerabilities and resilience to disasters. Sociological research has found that disasters affect individuals, families and communities differently. Damage and recovery are usually uneven due to the structural inequalities that exist prior to disasters. Immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities are typically considered more vulnerable to disasters than the general population. However, findings drawn from 28 in-depth interviews and publicly available data demonstrate the complexity, contextuality and resource-dependent nature of social vulnerability and resilience. My sociological analysis focuses on four major themes: 1) disaster linguicism, 2) earned strength and the paradox of social vulnerability and resilience, 3) communitas and disaster capital, and 4) the need to re-interpret social capital. The overall findings suggest that study respondents purposefully and subconsciously developed practical capitals such as linguistic infrastructure, earned strength and durable social networks to negotiate the "everyday disasters" that they face. In conjunction with disaster capital, this unexpectedly became a major source of their remarkable resilience in the Canterbury and Tohoku disasters. However, others seemed more isolated and vulnerable, mainly because these capitals depend on other capitals and contexts. Social connectedness is a main concern here, as their social agency alone may be insufficient to cope with the disasters. I argue that the durable system of social oppression (e.g. racial stigma) and the power imbalance that results are the major reasons for differential social capital and thus different levels of resilience. These findings inform us of: 1) the need to avoid mystifying "people's power" (or social agency) by individualizing resilience, 2) the need for a bottom-up approach to properly understand the experiences of the socially vulnerable, and 3) the requirement for greater inclusivity for people to own their own recovery. The key recommendation here is that, in order to reduce social vulnerability and promote resilience, we need to overcome social injustices. Policy discussion should concentrate on distributing capitals evenly, accompanied by efforts to effect such social transformation.Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htmSocial vulnerability, resilience and capital in disasters: Immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities in the 2010-2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disastersThesisCopyright: The authorhttp://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccessQ111963944