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Book ChapterDOI

Gender and Disaster: Foundations and Directions

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TLDR
Gendered disaster social science rests on the social fact of gender as a primary organizing principle of societies and the conviction that gender must be addressed if we are to claim knowledge about all people living in risky environments as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Gendered disaster social science rests on the social fact of gender as a primary organizing principle of societies and the conviction that gender must be addressed if we are to claim knowledge about all people living in risky environments. Theoretically, researchers in the area are moving toward a more nuanced, international, and comparative approach that examines gender relations in the context of other categories of social difference and power such as race, ethnicity, nationality, and social class. At a practical level, researchers seek to bring to the art and science of disaster risk reduction a richer appreciation of inequalities and differences based on sex and gender. As the world learns from each fresh tragedy, gender relations are part of the human experience of disasters and may under some conditions lead to the denial of the fundamental human rights of women and girls in crisis.

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Citations
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The Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States: A Scientific Assessment

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TL;DR: In this article, the Camroden-Camroden Associates, Inc. presented a survey of the state-of-the-art environmental protection agencies in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of social vulnerability to natural disasters: a comparative study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined and compared the methodologies being developed in assessing social vulnerability to natural disasters and found that coastal counties with more vulnerability in terms of social achieved status are positively associated with disaster damages, while variations in the development of the index using deductive and inductive measurement approaches produce different outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urban flooding in Lagos, Nigeria: Patterns of vulnerability and resilience among women

TL;DR: In this article, a mixed-method study of women's gendered experiences with flash floods in the coastal city of Lagos, Nigeria, was conducted to investigate the impacts of floods in general and specifically the July 2011 flood event on women's lives, livelihoods, and health.

Social Dimensions of Disaster Recovery

TL;DR: The authors consider a range of factors that include pre-disaster factors that shape vulnerabilities and exposures at multiple scales, such as indicators of social and economic well-being and governmental capacity; disaster impacts and their implications for recovery; immediate post-impact responses; and postdisaster variables such as the quality of governance systems; institutional capacity; civil society state relationships; systems of social provision; the appropriateness, coverage, and equity of recovery aid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Syrian Refugee Women's Health in Lebanon, Turkey, and Jordan and Recommendations for Improved Practice.

TL;DR: Recommendations for improved practice include taking a multilevel approach to eliminate social and service delivery barriers that prevent access to care, conducting thorough needs assessments, and creating policy and programmatic solutions that establish long term care for Syrian refugee women.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

At Risk: Natural Hazards, People's Vulnerability, and Disasters.

TL;DR: The authors argue that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment and that the concept of vulnerability is central to an understanding of disasters and their prevention or mitigation, exploring the extent and ways in which people gain access to resources.
Book

At Risk: Natural Hazards, People's Vulnerability and Disasters

TL;DR: In this paper, the challenge of disasters and their approach are discussed, and a framework and theory for disaster mitigation is presented. But the authors do not address the problem of access to resources and coping in adversarial situations.
Book

The Second Shift: Working Families and the Revolution at Home

TL;DR: Hochschild as mentioned in this paper found that men share housework equally with their wives in only twenty percent of dual-career families, and that women tend to suffer from chronic exhaustion, low sex drive, and more frequent illness as a result.
Journal ArticleDOI

For Public Sociology

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors map out the division of sociological labor and discover antagonistic interdependence among four types of knowledge: professional, critical, policy, and public.
Book

Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago

TL;DR: In this paper, Klinenberg describes the 1995 Chicago heat wave that buckled streets and downed portions of the city's power grid and left over 700 people dead, and the picture he paints is one no reader interested in the current state of American urbanism can afford to ignore.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
How does sex related to disaster?

Sex is related to disaster in the sense that gender relations can impact the experience of disasters and may lead to the denial of women's rights in crisis.