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The ‘most beautiful place’ where ‘it’s not possible to live’: a qualitative study of Relational Well-being in an area of climate disaster risk, Bangladesh [data]

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DataCite Commons2026-02-02 更新2026-05-07 收录
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https://heidata.uni-heidelberg.de/citation?persistentId=doi:10.11588/DATA/C4EWW7
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<b>Purpose</b>: Climate change is the greatest global health threat of the 21st century, but little is known about well-being in climate vulnerable populations. We investigate how well-being is shaped and influenced in such a population, where unique and common stressors draw on human well-being. <br> <b>Methods</b>: We present findings from 60 semi-structured in-depth interviews from an area of climate disaster risk in Bangladesh. We inductively analyzed our data following a Reflexive Thematic Analysis approach and then deductively applied a Relational Well-being (RWB) framework to organize refined themes around the importance of relationships for well-being as personal, societal, and environmental drivers.<br> <b>Results</b>: We found that well-being was influenced negatively by factors such as financial worries, forced migration, social pressure, and natural disasters. Well-being was influenced positively by factors such as financial satisfaction, voluntary migration, social support, and place attachment.<br> <b>Conclusions</b>: Using relational well-being as a conceptual lens allowed us to explore the dynamism and complexity of influencing factors on well-being that were partly specific to the local context and partly rooted in wider societal and global structures. Policies which aim to improve the well-being of climate vulnerable populations should consider relational well-being as a conceptual tool to leverage locally available informal resources, such as supporting reciprocal relationships with place and people.
提供机构:
heiDATA
创建时间:
2025-05-12
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