4.1.3 “Javanese” Psychologies 6
4.4 Concluding Remarks
Our three research sites have diverse village characteristics, although clear-cut characterizations prove difficult. Varieties within the villages, for example, between different neighborhood units (RT), offered insight into different social dynamics and economic resources. Our research sites were severely affected by the earthquake, with a slight gap between the coastal Mulya Sari and the further inland communities of Sido Kabul and Sendang, located closer to the earthquake’s epicenter. Combined with the micro-level sampling criteria of households and persons, our data cover a significant range of structural and sociopolitical features which potentially shaped the way Bantul residents coped with the 2006 earthquake.
security systems, such appeals to community capacities, effort, and self-reliance can be interpreted as both empowerment of disaster survivors and deference of state responsibility.
Acknowledgments The editors would like to thank Elise Serbaroli for her assistance in editing this chapter.
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Methodological Basis of a Culture-Specific Coping Approach
Silke Schwarz, Tri Hayuning Tyas and Johana E. Prawitasari-Hadiyono