Elon alumna Leena Dahal and associate professors Mussa Idris and Vanessa Bravo collaborated on ethnographic research about post-disaster Nepal after the April 2015 earthquakes

Alumna Leena Dahal ’17 has published, as first author, a peer-reviewed journal article developed in collaboration with two of her mentors at Elon: Associate Professor Mussa Idris from the department of Sociology and Anthropology and Associate Professor Vanessa Bravo from the Department of Strategic Communications.
鈥’It helped us, and it hurt us’: The role of social media in shaping agency and action among youth in post-disaster Nepal” was published Oct. 9 in its early-access version at the Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, a peer-reviewed journal published by Wiley-Blackwell in the United Kingdom. The article will be assigned a volume number and page numbers by the end of the year. For now, it is available at .
The article’s findings are based on data gathered through ethnographic fieldwork and 50 in-depth interviews conducted in Nepal in 2015 and 2016 with youth who got actively 鈥揳nd immediately- involved in relief efforts after the country was hit by several strong earthquakes in April 2015, when more than 9,000 people died. Nepal is Dahal麓s country of origin.
The article describes the ways, as narrated by the study’s participants, in which social media and other digital platforms helped but also hindered the relief efforts of youth-led groups. The article also shows the creative capacity of the youth to rapidly organize relief responses, managing the situation efficiently and properly, without following the top-down approach that tends to dominate the descriptions of crisis management in the literature.
As the article鈥檚 abstract reads, the results of this case study can help 鈥渁cademics and practitioners gauge the effectiveness of social media platforms to respond to crises, understand their impact for people in distinct generations and evaluate the feasibility and inclusivity of using social media as a tool in national crises, especially in developing countries.鈥
Dahal, the first author of the article, graduated from 福利亚洲国产精品 in 2017 as an International Fellow with a double major in strategic communications and international studies. She was also a Lumen Scholar, with Idris serving as her mentor for that research. Also under Idris鈥 mentorship, Dahal was awarded the Gates Cambridge Scholarship, a high honor given to only about 35 scholars in the United States from a pool of about 6,000 applicants.
The Gates Cambridge Scholarship allowed Leena to obtain a master’s degree in Modern South Asian Studies at the University of Cambridge, in the United Kingdom, where her master麓s dissertation was awarded the C.A. Bayly Prize for the best dissertation in her department, and it was also awarded, nationwide, as best master`s dissertation by the British Association of South Asian Studies (BASAS).
After obtaining her master’s degree, Dahal worked in Nepal as opinions editor at the Kathmandu Post and later as a communications specialist at Nepal麓s World Wide Fund for Nature.
鈥淲ithout Dr. Idris鈥 deliberate emphasis on a student-led mentoring approach 鈥 where conversations are guided but not led, where critical analysis is supplemented but not shaped and self-reflection is relaxed and never inauthentic 鈥 I strongly believe that I would not have experienced the amount of personal growth and confidence in my research capacity,” Dahal said of her experience conducting undergraduate research at Elon under Idris鈥 guidance. “His mentoring not only shaped my research but always shaped my ethnographic lens and reflexivity as a researcher鈥攖wo things that I continue to carry with me and develop since I graduated from Elon.鈥
Dahal said that Bravo 鈥渃onstantly encouraged me to think about issues affecting communities near and far through various perspectives and opened my eyes to ideas I had not previously considered. For that, she shaped me and many other students into more globally minded critical thinkers who are engaged in issues beyond those that affect their own demographics.鈥
The Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management is a Q2 (top 50 percent) journal in the fields of management information systems and management, monitoring, policy and law, according to the Scimago Journal and Country Rank (SJR). At the time of writing, it had an H index of 46, which showcases a high research-impact level.