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dc.contributor.authorDominey-Howes, Dale T.M.
dc.date.accessioned2020-01-09
dc.date.available2020-01-09
dc.date.issued2015-11-01
dc.identifier.citationDominey-Howes, D. (2015). Seeing “ the dark passenger ” – Reflections on the emotional trauma of conducting post-disaster research. Emotion, Space and Society, 17, 55–62. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emospa.2015.06.008en
dc.identifier.issn17554586
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/21637
dc.descriptionI thank the Editors of Emotion, Space and Society for giving us the opportunity to organise and contribute to this Special Issue. I thank Christine Eriksen, Emma Calgaro and Scott McKinnon for their very helpful comments on earlier versions of this manuscript and Danielle Drozdzewski for her guidance, support, mentorship and provision of references. I am most grateful to Anne Eyre and Gail Adams-Hutcheson for detailed and helpful comments during the review stage of the original manuscript. Alette Willis is thanked for her Editorial guidance. I also thank my current and former students and colleagues who have shared their experiences with me. The Australian Research Council is thanked for a series of grants ( DP0877572 ; DP130100877 ; DP130102658 and LP110200134 ) that have supported my team's work in disaster-affected places from which this paper has emerged.en
dc.description.abstractThis paper acknowledges '. the [my] dark passenger' of emotional vicarious trauma associated with conducting post-disaster research. Post-disaster research is tightly bounded by ethics and professional codes of conduct requiring us to be vigilant about the impact of our work on our participants. However, as a disaster researcher, I have been affected by vicarious trauma. 'Direct personal' vicarious trauma is where I experienced trauma associated with witnessing devastation making a professional separation from my objective subjects impossible. 'Indirect professional' vicarious trauma occurred when PhD students and others under my supervision that I sent to disaster affected places, experienced significant negative emotional responses and trauma as they interviewed their participants. In these situations, I became traumatised by my lack of training and reflected on how the emphasis on the participants came at the expense of the researcher in my care. Limited literature exists that focuses on the vicarious trauma experienced by researchers, and their supervisors working in post-disaster places and this paper is a contribution to that body of scholarship. In acknowledging and exploring the emotions and vicarious trauma of researchers embedded in landscapes of disaster, it becomes possible for future researchers to pre-empt this phenomenon and to consider ways that they might manage this.en
dc.description.sponsorshipARC-DP130102658,DP130100877,LP110200134,DP0877572en
dc.language.isoen_AUen
dc.publisherElsevier B.V.en
dc.relationARC-DP130102658,DP130100877,LP110200134,DP0877572en
dc.rightsOtheren
dc.subjectVicarious traumaen
dc.subjectDisastersen
dc.subjectEmotionsen
dc.subjectImpactsen
dc.subjectResearcheren
dc.subjectResponsibilityen
dc.subjectVicarious resilienceen
dc.titleSeeing ‘the dark passenger’ – reflections on the emotional trauma of conducting post-disaster researchen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.subject.asrc040604en
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.emospa.2015.06.008
dc.type.pubtypeAuthor accepted manuscripten
dc.relation.arcDP130102658
dc.relation.arcDP130100877
dc.relation.arcLP110200134
dc.relation.arcDP0877572
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Scienceen


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