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Natural disaster, social cohesion, and prosociality: A natural experiment

AI Summary
  • Flooding causally increased volunteering time and task variety, though not the likelihood of volunteering.
  • Effect depended on social cohesion; greater volunteering occurred only at moderate to high cohesion levels.
  • Stress appraisals fully mediated flood effects; prior 9/11 rescue experience predicted prosocial outcomes; confounds did not explain link.
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Am Psychol. 2026 Jun 15. doi: 10.1037/amp0001732. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Although natural disaster often stimulates prosocial behavior, it is unclear whether more severe forms of disaster enhance or detract from these effects. We investigated the impact of flooding on prosociality, its moderation by social cohesion, and stress appraisal as a key mediator. Participants were drawn from a natural experiment of Hurricane Sandy (n = 1,182 flooded participants; n = 3,162 nonflooded controls). Flooded participants reported greater volunteering time and more varied volunteering tasks (ps < .0001), but not a greater likelihood of any volunteering, relative to controls. An instrumental variable analysis supported a causal effect of flood on greater volunteering time and more varied volunteering. Flooding also interacted with social cohesion so that greater volunteering time occurred only among individuals who reported moderate to high levels of cohesion. In addition, prior experience with rescue and recovery after the 9/11 terror attacks robustly predicted prosocial outcomes. Finally, stressful hurricane appraisals fully mediated the effect of flooding on greater volunteering time and more varied helping behavior, suggesting a key positive role for stress appraisals. Plausible confounds, such as residing in the inundation zone, evacuating, and demographic factors, did not account for the flood-prosocial behavior link. Findings indicate that severe disasters can promote more sustained and varied volunteering behavior, that a moderate degree of social cohesion may be necessary for sustained prosociality, and that stress appraisals are potential mechanisms of persistent prosocial responses to severe disaster. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).

PMID:42295217 | DOI:10.1037/amp0001732

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