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Stronger together: cultivating a sense of community in virtual communities during disasters

Stronger together: cultivating a sense of community in virtual communities during disasters
Stronger together: cultivating a sense of community in virtual communities during disasters
Purpose: the presence of unverifiable, inaccurate, and irrelevant information during disasters can encourage people to withdraw from virtual communities. One way to combat this problem is to cultivate a sense of community. However, little is known about how a sense of community can be fostered quickly in virtual communities during a disaster. Our study addresses this limitation of prior research work.

Design/methodology/approach: we conducted an in-depth qualitative case study of a Reddit community during Hurricane Harvey. The main sources were archival data, including community threads and associated comments. Data from newspapers, magazine reports, and government websites were also collected to capture contextual information about the disaster.

Findings: our findings indicate that socialisation and formal control can foster a sense of community. This is made possible through the strategic use of social media, which involves (i) endorsing emergent norms and (ii) enforcing those norms through a disciplining process.

Practical implications – We offer practical suggestions for virtual community moderators and members on strategically using social media features to create, enforce and institutionalise emergent norms. We recommend that system designers develop adaptable social media features that can be reconfigured according to the context.

Originality/value: we show how socialisation and formal control must coexist in virtual communities to foster a sense of community, rather than prioritising one over the other. We also unpack how the strategic use of social media can inform this process. We argue that social media features should be adaptable, rather than pre-set, to meet emergent needs.
1758-5813
31
Hasan, Mahmudul
84f09237-2031-4c24-aa7d-c9593482bd26
Bahar, Varqa Shamsi
9d5ae13c-eb5e-45de-8fa4-0f6437bea872
Hasan, Mahmudul
84f09237-2031-4c24-aa7d-c9593482bd26
Bahar, Varqa Shamsi
9d5ae13c-eb5e-45de-8fa4-0f6437bea872

Hasan, Mahmudul and Bahar, Varqa Shamsi (2025) Stronger together: cultivating a sense of community in virtual communities during disasters. Information Technology & People, 31. (doi:10.1108/ITP-11-2024-1383).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: the presence of unverifiable, inaccurate, and irrelevant information during disasters can encourage people to withdraw from virtual communities. One way to combat this problem is to cultivate a sense of community. However, little is known about how a sense of community can be fostered quickly in virtual communities during a disaster. Our study addresses this limitation of prior research work.

Design/methodology/approach: we conducted an in-depth qualitative case study of a Reddit community during Hurricane Harvey. The main sources were archival data, including community threads and associated comments. Data from newspapers, magazine reports, and government websites were also collected to capture contextual information about the disaster.

Findings: our findings indicate that socialisation and formal control can foster a sense of community. This is made possible through the strategic use of social media, which involves (i) endorsing emergent norms and (ii) enforcing those norms through a disciplining process.

Practical implications – We offer practical suggestions for virtual community moderators and members on strategically using social media features to create, enforce and institutionalise emergent norms. We recommend that system designers develop adaptable social media features that can be reconfigured according to the context.

Originality/value: we show how socialisation and formal control must coexist in virtual communities to foster a sense of community, rather than prioritising one over the other. We also unpack how the strategic use of social media can inform this process. We argue that social media features should be adaptable, rather than pre-set, to meet emergent needs.

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Hasan & Bahar 2025_ITP_Author Accepted Manuscript - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2025
Published date: 18 September 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505203
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505203
ISSN: 1758-5813
PURE UUID: 267c9d6c-8c84-4651-91b0-058a08b06d91
ORCID for Mahmudul Hasan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1186-8564

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Oct 2025 16:50
Last modified: 02 Oct 2025 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Mahmudul Hasan ORCID iD
Author: Varqa Shamsi Bahar

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