Abstract

BackgroundExisting research has rarely examined an earthquake’s sustained impact and the trajectory of the earthquake survivors’ life satisfaction over time. This study aims to analyze longitudinal changes in life satisfaction of Wenchuan earthquake survivors and the impact of social capital and government relief policy.MethodsThis research applied a hierarchical linear model to longitudinal survey data collected after the earthquake. The survey was divided into three waves and was collected from Deyang City and Mianyang City of Sichuan Province. A random sampling method was used; a sample of 225 participants had valid responses over three waves of the survey.ResultsThis study found that a survivor’s social capital and the perception of the fairness of government relief policy have a significant effect on the trajectory of life satisfaction post-disaster. First, the initial life satisfaction of those with high social capital was significantly higher than of those with low social capital, whilst survivors with high social capital had a lower rate of change in life satisfaction. Second, one year after the earthquake, those who felt government policy was unfair had a lower life satisfaction than those who felt it was fair. However, from the first year to the fourth year after the disaster, survivors who believed that the government policy was unfair experienced a higher rate of change in life satisfaction than those who did not. Third, the fairness of government relief policy moderates the relationship between survivors’ social capital and changes in life satisfaction. A fair policy of relief can reduce the negative impact of the lack of individual social capital on life satisfaction.ConclusionsSurvivors reconstruct life satisfaction through their social network and the perception of the fairness of the government’s post-disaster relief policy. Therefore, to promote the improvement of life satisfaction of survivors, it is necessary to cultivate social capital and ensure fairness of the relief policy.

Highlights

  • Existing research has rarely examined an earthquake’s sustained impact and the trajectory of the earthquake survivors’ life satisfaction over time

  • Survivors’ mean life satisfaction increased from 10.633 one year after the earthquake to 11.782 four years later. It shows a linear increase in life satisfaction, indicating that people’s life satisfaction has gradually recovered after the disaster

  • The t-test shows that demographic differences in life satisfaction after disaster are not completely significant

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Summary

Introduction

Existing research has rarely examined an earthquake’s sustained impact and the trajectory of the earthquake survivors’ life satisfaction over time. This study aims to analyze longitudinal changes in life satisfaction of Wenchuan earthquake survivors and the impact of social capital and government relief policy. On May 12, 2008, the Wenchuan earthquake occurred in Sichuan, China, leading to significant personal injuries and property loss. The earthquake’s continuous impact is reflected in the disaster area’s new geographical outline and village morphology and in the multi-dimensional long-term effects on survivors’ psychological states, social relations, and quality of life (QOL). The Wenchuan earthquake may have impacted people’s life satisfaction, which is a long-term impact; this research focuses on changes in life satisfaction over an extended period of time post-disaster

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