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      Community-level social support responses in a slow-motion technological disaster: the case of Libby, Montana.

      American Journal of Community Psychology
      Adult, Aged, Altruism, Asbestos, Amphibole, poisoning, Asbestosis, epidemiology, psychology, Consumer Participation, Disasters, Environmental Exposure, adverse effects, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Mining, Montana, Social Support, Social Work

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          Abstract

          Social support is an important resource for communities experiencing disasters. However, a disaster's nature (rapid- versus slow-onset, natural versus technological) may influence community-level responses. Disaster research on social support focuses primarily on rapid-onset natural disasters and, to a lesser extent, rapid-onset technological disasters. Little research has addressed slow-onset disasters. This study explores social support processes in Libby, MT, a community experiencing a "slow-motion technological disaster" due to widespread amphibole asbestos exposure. A comprehensive social support coding system was applied to focus-group and in-depth-interview transcripts. Results reveal that, although the community has a history of normative supportiveness during community and individual crises, that norm has been violated in the asbestos disaster context. Results are interpreted as a failure to achieve an "emergent altruistic community." Specifically, community-level conflict appears to interfere with previously established social support patterns. The observed phenomenon can be understood as the deterioration of a previously supportive community.

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