Exploring Island Resilience Through the Lived Experiences of Pacific Islands People Adapting to a Global Disruption: A Comparative Case Study in the Cook Islands and the Kingdom of Tonga

Roxane De Waegh
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Abstract

This research explored the lived experiences and perceptions of Pacific Islands’ people responding and adapting to the significant global disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The primary aim of this study was to develop a deeper understanding of the social dimensions of resilience from the perspectives of Pacific Islands’ people. While there has been growing interest in these explorations of resilience, no studies to date have explored how Pacific Islands’ communities respond and adapt to a global disruption through the lens of subjective well-being and human agency. This research addressed this using a comparative case study approach to explore the adaptive responses of people in the Cook Islands and the Kingdom of Tonga. This research used an interpretive research paradigm underpinned by a constructivist grounded theory methodology and, due to the COVID-19 travel restrictions, undertook semi-structured interviews with 25 participants in the Cook Islands and 24 participants in Tonga through the use of online video-conferencing technologies (primarily Zoom) facilitated by the development of local research partnerships. The findings indicate that the resilience of Pacific Islands people depends on their capacity to collectively act and forge networks that are simultaneously local and global, enabling the use of traditional and foreign knowledge systems in ways that support the local human capacity that enhances the self-reliance of their island societies amidst a volatile, globalised world. These insights challenge the reductionist, ahistorical, and disempowering framings of small island nations as inherently vulnerable and externally dependent by demonstrating how Pacific Islands people used various forms of situated agency and social capital to increase their bargaining power and support the social-ecological wellbeing of their communities according to their needs, interests, and priorities.
通过太平洋岛屿人民适应全球破坏的生活经验探索岛屿的复原力:库克群岛和汤加王国的比较案例研究
本研究探讨了太平洋岛屿人民应对和适应COVID-19大流行造成的重大全球破坏的生活经验和看法。本研究的主要目的是从太平洋岛屿居民的角度对心理弹性的社会维度有更深入的了解。虽然人们对这些弹性探索的兴趣越来越大,但迄今为止还没有研究通过主观幸福感和人类能动性来探讨太平洋岛屿社区如何应对和适应全球破坏。本研究采用比较案例研究方法探讨库克群岛和汤加王国人民的适应性反应,解决了这一问题。本研究采用了一种以建构主义扎根理论方法论为基础的解释性研究范式,由于COVID-19的旅行限制,通过使用在线视频会议技术(主要是Zoom),在当地研究伙伴关系的发展推动下,对库克群岛的25名参与者和汤加的24名参与者进行了半结构化访谈。研究结果表明,太平洋岛屿人民的复原力取决于他们集体行动和建立同时是地方和全球的网络的能力,从而能够以支持当地人类能力的方式使用传统和外国知识系统,从而增强其岛屿社会在动荡的全球化世界中的自力更生。这些见解通过展示太平洋岛屿人民如何利用各种形式的情境代理和社会资本来提高他们的议价能力,并根据他们的需求、利益和优先事项来支持他们社区的社会生态福祉,挑战了将小岛屿国家视为内在脆弱和外部依赖的简化主义、非历史性和剥夺权力的框架。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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