Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Bouncing back

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

E-pub ahead of print

Standard

Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities. / Sutcliffe, Sarah; Cinner, Joshua; Lau, Jacqueline et al.
In: Regional Environmental Change, Vol. 25, No. 3, 107, 30.09.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sutcliffe, S, Cinner, J, Lau, J, Muly, I, Wanyonyi, S, Mbaru, E, Muthiga, N & Barnes, M 2025, 'Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities', Regional Environmental Change, vol. 25, no. 3, 107. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0

APA

Sutcliffe, S., Cinner, J., Lau, J., Muly, I., Wanyonyi, S., Mbaru, E., Muthiga, N., & Barnes, M. (2025). Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities. Regional Environmental Change, 25(3), Article 107. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0

Vancouver

Sutcliffe S, Cinner J, Lau J, Muly I, Wanyonyi S, Mbaru E et al. Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities. Regional Environmental Change. 2025 Sept 30;25(3):107. Epub 2025 Aug 5. doi: 10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0

Author

Sutcliffe, Sarah ; Cinner, Joshua ; Lau, Jacqueline et al. / Bouncing back : recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities. In: Regional Environmental Change. 2025 ; Vol. 25, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{1fee55f117d84221954e0c95f62cdc01,
title = "Bouncing back: recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities",
abstract = "The COVID-19 pandemic altered almost every aspect of people{\textquoteright}s lives and undermined human wellbeing. Now that restrictions have lifted, we need to identify the lingering effects of the pandemic to strategically direct the ongoing recovery process. We conducted a mixed-methods longitudinal analysis of material, relational and subjective wellbeing in five coastal fishing communities in Kenya before, during and after the implementation of COVID-19 containment policies. We drew on qualitative analysis of interviews and quantitative analysis of surveys conducted with 32 fishers at three time points to explore how the pandemic affected wellbeing during the first year of the pandemic. We then used surveys conducted with the majority of fishers in each community in 2016, 2019 and 2022 to determine the scale of the impact of the pandemic proportionate to the impacts of ongoing changes in the communities. We identified a range of wellbeing impacts during the pandemic but also found that communities appear to be recovering. Although there were meaningful differences between our indicators of wellbeing immediately prior to (2019) and after (2022) the pandemic, our analysis leveraging data from 2016 suggests that these differences align with a longer-term trend likely associated with ongoing social-ecological changes. In all but one indicator (work enjoyment), we were unable to identify any significant long-term impacts of the pandemic on any of our wellbeing indicators. Our research provides compelling evidence of the capacity of coastal fishing communities to “bounce back” from the impacts of COVID-19, which likely has relevance for future shocks.",
keywords = "Small-scale fishing, COVID-19, Relational wellbeing, Material wellbeing, Subjective wellbeing",
author = "Sarah Sutcliffe and Joshua Cinner and Jacqueline Lau and Innocent Muly and Stephen Wanyonyi and Emmanuel Mbaru and Nyawira Muthiga and Michele Barnes",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
journal = "Regional Environmental Change",
issn = "1436-3798",
publisher = "SPRINGER HEIDELBERG",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bouncing back

T2 - recovery from the impacts of COVID-19 on human wellbeing in Kenyan coastal fishing communities

AU - Sutcliffe, Sarah

AU - Cinner, Joshua

AU - Lau, Jacqueline

AU - Muly, Innocent

AU - Wanyonyi, Stephen

AU - Mbaru, Emmanuel

AU - Muthiga, Nyawira

AU - Barnes, Michele

PY - 2025/8/5

Y1 - 2025/8/5

N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic altered almost every aspect of people’s lives and undermined human wellbeing. Now that restrictions have lifted, we need to identify the lingering effects of the pandemic to strategically direct the ongoing recovery process. We conducted a mixed-methods longitudinal analysis of material, relational and subjective wellbeing in five coastal fishing communities in Kenya before, during and after the implementation of COVID-19 containment policies. We drew on qualitative analysis of interviews and quantitative analysis of surveys conducted with 32 fishers at three time points to explore how the pandemic affected wellbeing during the first year of the pandemic. We then used surveys conducted with the majority of fishers in each community in 2016, 2019 and 2022 to determine the scale of the impact of the pandemic proportionate to the impacts of ongoing changes in the communities. We identified a range of wellbeing impacts during the pandemic but also found that communities appear to be recovering. Although there were meaningful differences between our indicators of wellbeing immediately prior to (2019) and after (2022) the pandemic, our analysis leveraging data from 2016 suggests that these differences align with a longer-term trend likely associated with ongoing social-ecological changes. In all but one indicator (work enjoyment), we were unable to identify any significant long-term impacts of the pandemic on any of our wellbeing indicators. Our research provides compelling evidence of the capacity of coastal fishing communities to “bounce back” from the impacts of COVID-19, which likely has relevance for future shocks.

AB - The COVID-19 pandemic altered almost every aspect of people’s lives and undermined human wellbeing. Now that restrictions have lifted, we need to identify the lingering effects of the pandemic to strategically direct the ongoing recovery process. We conducted a mixed-methods longitudinal analysis of material, relational and subjective wellbeing in five coastal fishing communities in Kenya before, during and after the implementation of COVID-19 containment policies. We drew on qualitative analysis of interviews and quantitative analysis of surveys conducted with 32 fishers at three time points to explore how the pandemic affected wellbeing during the first year of the pandemic. We then used surveys conducted with the majority of fishers in each community in 2016, 2019 and 2022 to determine the scale of the impact of the pandemic proportionate to the impacts of ongoing changes in the communities. We identified a range of wellbeing impacts during the pandemic but also found that communities appear to be recovering. Although there were meaningful differences between our indicators of wellbeing immediately prior to (2019) and after (2022) the pandemic, our analysis leveraging data from 2016 suggests that these differences align with a longer-term trend likely associated with ongoing social-ecological changes. In all but one indicator (work enjoyment), we were unable to identify any significant long-term impacts of the pandemic on any of our wellbeing indicators. Our research provides compelling evidence of the capacity of coastal fishing communities to “bounce back” from the impacts of COVID-19, which likely has relevance for future shocks.

KW - Small-scale fishing

KW - COVID-19

KW - Relational wellbeing

KW - Material wellbeing

KW - Subjective wellbeing

U2 - 10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0

DO - 10.1007/s10113-025-02439-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

JO - Regional Environmental Change

JF - Regional Environmental Change

SN - 1436-3798

IS - 3

M1 - 107

ER -