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Women rebuilding lives post-disaster: innovative community practices for building resilience and promoting sustainable development

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight women's active participation in community-based disaster recovery efforts drawing from the results of the ‘Rebuilding Lives Post-disaster: Innovative Community Practices for Sustainable Development’ by an international research partnership.
Abstract: Disasters result in devastating human, economic, and environmental effects. The paper highlights women's active participation in community-based disaster recovery efforts drawing from the results of the ‘Rebuilding Lives Post-disaster: Innovative Community Practices for Sustainable Development’ by an international research partnership. Two case studies are presented from Pakistan and the USA to demonstrate how women contribute to building resilience and promoting sustainable development in diverse post-disaster contexts. The policy and practice implications are relevant for discussions regarding the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals and framework.

Summary (2 min read)

Introduction

  • Disasters such as floods, wildfires, earthquakes, and hurricanes result in devastating effects on people, economies, and the environment.
  • Climate change, population growth, patterns of economic development, pollution, increased urbanisation, unsustainable development, andwidening social andeconomicdisparities have contributed toa recentdramatic increase in global disaster events.
  • Altruistic humanitarian impulses are also stymied through national self-interest, as has occurred in climate change discussions.
  • The article then presents key points from the research into women’s experience from the two study contexts.

Understanding resilience

  • The authors research partnership is contributing to a more nuanced understanding of resilience in post-disaster contexts designed to better understand human society–environment interactions, primarily based on social action and social justice approaches.
  • According to Ungar, resilience is both the capacity of individuals to navigate their way to the psychological, social, cultural and physical resources that build and sustain their well-being, and their individual Julie Drolet et al.
  • Gender & Development Vol. 23, No. 3, 2015 435 and collective capacity to negotiate for these resources to be provided in culturally meaningful ways.
  • The role of ‘social capital’ (that is, relations of mutual support between neighbours, friends, community groups, and other social networks) is considered by Robin Ersing (2012) as a means to enhance community resilience.
  • Recent social work approaches to disasters also highlight the importance of environmental justice, arguing that this is integral to social justice, and the realisation of human rights and sustainable development (Dominelli 2012).

Linking DRR to sustainable development

  • Under the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, governments have sought to increase resilience capacity by focusing on community-based disaster risk reduction , and linking this to the Sustainable Development Goals that have replaced the Millennium Development Goals.
  • Critically, when the authors examined the common factors arising from their research in the case-study sites, they noted that life-stage and structural factors, including taken-forgranted gendered patterns and practices, shape particular vulnerabilities for women.
  • From their role in maintaining the home environment to rebuilding the community, the study shows the vulnerability and capability of women in post-disaster activities.
  • And the difficulties involved in conforming to norms of seclusion, women attempted to adhere to these norms wherever possible.

Case study 2: Hurricanes in Volusia County, Florida, USA

  • As suggested at the start of the article, resilience has individual and collective dimensions, and individuals respond to, and recover from, disasters within an environmental and social context.
  • A focus group session was held with affected women who spoke limited English, and Julie Drolet et al.
  • During the focus group, members of the migrant labourer community spoke of the strength found within their collective actions to unite and support each other during the early stages of disaster recovery.

Notes

  • 2 The Australian bushfires occurred in the state of Victoria on 7 February 2009 and is the single largest disaster to occur in Australia during peacetime since Federation.
  • Thousands of people were deeply affected by the traumatic experience of the Black Saturday bushfires that resulted in 173 people losing their lives, over 2,000 homes lost, and 78 towns impacted.
  • The Australian country team conducted research in partnership with affected communities in 2013–14 to learn about their experiences.

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Citation for published item:
Drolet, J. and Dominelli, L. and Alston, M. and Ersing, R. and Mathbor, G. and Wu, H. (2015) 'Women
rebuilding lives post-disaster : innovative community practices for building resilience and promoting
sustainable development.', Gender and development., 23 (3). pp. 433-448.
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https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2015.1096040
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Gender & Development
ISSN: 1355-2074 (Print) 1364-9221 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cgde20
Women rebuilding lives post-disaster: innovative
community practices for building resilience and
promoting sustainable development
Julie Drolet, Lena Dominelli, Margaret Alston, Robin Ersing, Golam Mathbor
& Haorui Wu
To cite this article: Julie Drolet, Lena Dominelli, Margaret Alston, Robin Ersing, Golam Mathbor
& Haorui Wu (2015) Women rebuilding lives post-disaster: innovative community practices for
building resilience and promoting sustainable development, Gender & Development, 23:3, 433-448,
DOI: 10.1080/13552074.2015.1096040
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2015.1096040
© 2015 The Author(s). Published by Taylor &
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Published online: 13 Nov 2015.
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Citing articles: 9 View citing articles

Women rebuilding lives post-disaster:
innovative community practices for building
resilience and promoting sustainable
development
Julie Drolet, Lena Dominelli, Margaret Alston, Robin Ersing,
Golam Mathbor and Haorui Wu
Disasters result in devastating human, economic, and environmental effects. The paper
highlights womens active participation in community-based disaster recovery efforts
drawing from the results of the Rebuilding Lives Post-disaster: Innovative Community
Practices for Sustainable Development by an international research partnership. Two
case studies are presented from Pakistan and the USA to demonstrate how women
contribute to building resilience and promoting sustainable development in diverse post-
disaster contexts. The policy and practice implications are relevant for discussions
regarding the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals and framework.
Partiendo del hecho de que los desastres provocan efectos devastadores en términos
humanos, económicos y ambientales y apoyándose en los resultados aportados por el
estudio Rebuilding Lives Post-Disaster: Innovative Community Practices for
Sustainable Development [Reconstruyendo la vida tras el desastre: prácticas
comunitarias innov adoras para el desarrollo sostenible], realizado por una alianza para
la investigación a nivel internacional, el presente artículo destaca la dinámica
participación de las mujeres en las actividades comunitarias de recuperación tras el
desastre. En tal sentido, se presentan dos estudios de caso efectuados en Pakistán y en
Estados Unidos, los cuales pretenden mostrar cómo las mujeres coadyuvan en la
construcción de la resiliencia y la promoción del desarrollo sostenible en diversos
contextos posdesastre. Las implicaciones que ello conlleva para las políticas públicas y
la práctica resultan pertinentes para los debates realizados en el marco de los
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible a ser impulsado después de 2015.
Les catastrophes ont des effets dévastateurs sur les plans humain, économique et
environnemen tal. Cet article met en relief la participation active des femmes aux efforts
communautaires de relèvement post-catastrophe en se servant des résultats de «
Rebuilding Lives Post-Disaster: Innovative Community Practices for Sustainable
Gender & Development, 2015
Vol. 23, No. 3, 433 448, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2015.1096040
© 2015 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis. This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/
licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
433

Development » (Reconstruire les vies post-catastrophe : pratiques communautaires
innovantes pour le développement durable), rapport produit par un partenariat de
recher che international. Deux études de cas sont proposées, une du Pakistan et lautr e des
États-Unis, pour présenter la manière dont les femmes contribuent au renforcement de la
résilience et à la prom otion du développement durable dans divers contextes post-
catastrophe. Les implications sur le plan des politiques et des pratiques sont pertinentes
pour les discussions re latives au cadre et aux Objectifs de développement durable post-2015.
Key words: resilience; disasters; recovery; gender; partnership
Introduction
Disasters such as floods, wildfires, earthquakes, and hurricanes result in devastating effects
on people, economies, and the environment. Climate change, population growth, patterns
of economic development, pollution, increased urbanisation, unsustainable development,
andwidening social and economicdisparities have contributed to a recent dramatic increase
in global disaster events. The International Disaster Database (http://www.unisdr.org/w e/
inform/disaster-statistics, last checked 9 September 2015) highlights that the incidence of
flood and windstorm disasters has not only increased markedly since the 1960s, but the
events themselves are more intense, last longer, and affect more people. As signatories to
the United Nations (UN) Framework Convention on Climate Change, launched in 1992,
most countries have committed to preventing dangerous anthropogenic (human-
induced) climate change (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2014).
The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 20152030 reports that over a ten-year
period, from 2005 to 2015, disasters across the world caused US$1.3 trillion in economic
losses, displaced 144 million people, and affected 1.5 billion others (UN 2015, 9). These stag-
gering figures sometimes produce compassion fatigue, as people become inured to them.
Altruistic humanitarian impulses are also stymied through national self-interest, as has
occurred in climate change discussions. Climate change, a (hu)man-made disaster, is a
global phenomenon, and like other disasters, it affects everyone differently. It has demon-
strable deleterious consequences for small island states, in danger of sinking into the ocean
as ice-caps melt (IPCC 2014), requiring both mitigation and adaptation endeavours to
reduce this threat (IPCC 2014). Diverse communities also experience disasters differently;
for example, the more economically and socially marginalised the community, the more
risks there are from disasters. Some locations are more vulnerable than others because
there are differences in geography, aid and resources are distributed unequally, and the pol-
itical will to affirm equality between peoples within countries and across borders is absent.
Rebuilding lives post-disaster: a research initiative
In 2012, a research partnership was set up, titled Rebuilding Lives Post-disaster: Inno-
vative Community Practices for Sustainable Development (RLPD 2015). It brought
Women rebuilding lives post-disaster
434
Gender & Development Vol. 23, No. 3, 2015

together academic researchers from Canada, the UK, the USA, Australia, India, Pakistan,
and Taiwan; practitioners and educators from social work educational institutions such
as the Canadian Association for Social Work Education, and the International Associ-
ation of Schools of Social Work; and community-based and government partners, who
bring expertise in disaster recovery and reconstruction. Since our inception, we have
conducted field research in six countries to better understand the long-term disaster
recovery and reconstruction challenges faced by communities affected by disasters.
We recognise building resilience requires more than reducing vulnerability it calls
for empowering responses to disasters, which aim to support and foster peoples resili-
ence, enhancing their abil ity to respond to disasters, against a backdrop of the longer-
term challenges of building susta inable livelihoods. In our research, we employ and
develop existing theories about the social and gendered construction of vulnerability
and capabilities.
This article draws on recent research undertaken by the RLPD partnership, and pre-
sents two case studies from Pakistan and the USA, to demonstrate the similarities, as
well as differences, in the experience of two communi ties coping with the impact of
different natural disasters and hazards in countries with very different levels of wealth.
The research findings highlight womens active participation in community-based
disaster recovery efforts. The study employed qualitative research methods, and the
sample for all six countries included over 70 interviews with community leaders, gov-
ernment officials, and disaster responders, and 18 focus group meetings with over 250
affected women and men to learn about the social and economic effects of disasters,
and in particular their impact on gender roles and power relations. The research was
guided by the principles of community-based research in diverse cultural contexts,
1
which holds that it is appropriate to learn from the perspectives of disaster-affected indi-
viduals and community members in disaster recovery processes.
The article starts with three brief sections to frame the research findings and discus-
sion. These explore the concept of resilience, highlight the importance of linking research
and programming on disaster risk reduction (DRR) to sustainable development, and
examine the topic of women and resilience. The article then presents key points from
the research into womens experience from the two study contexts.
Understanding resilience
Our research partnership is contributing to a more nuanced understanding of resilience
in post-disaster contexts designed to better understand human societyenvironment
interactions, primarily based on social action and social justice approaches. According
to Ungar,
resilience is both the capaci ty of individuals to navigate their way to the psychological, social,
cultural and physical resources that build and sustain their well-being , and their individual
Julie Drolet et al.
Gender & Development Vol. 23, No. 3, 2015
435

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Abstract: Catastrophes like earthquakes, hurricanes and tsunamis, have a devastating effect which extends beyond personal or material losses and also affect social order. At the same time, there is an increasing amount of scientific evidence demonstrating the impact of disasters on gender relations. This article aims to investigate an issue that to date has not been examined in the Spanish context, namely the gender roles undertaken by men and women in the rescue of people after a catastrophe has occurred. To this end, the discourse from four focus groups of people who experienced the 2011 earthquake in Lorca (Spain) has been analysed. The focus groups were recorded, transcribed and codified with the MAXQDA program and afterwards an interpretative analysis was carried out. The results of this study demonstrate that, although, in principle, the danger should be the same, the lived experiences and reactions of men and women faced with a catastrophic event are often different. Men appear as the principal protagonists of the rescue phase and their way of rescuing as the norm. Despite the fact that women also play an active role in saving people, their protective actions are less visible. In part this is because women do not limit their actions to physical rescue, but also make suggestions and recommendations aimed at helping people around them and often remain with those who are rescued. These findings point to the need to broaden the notion of what rescue involves through incorporating the specific actions of women identified.

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Cites background from "Women rebuilding lives post-disaste..."

  • ...Social work disaster research explores the factors that contribute to inequitable access to services and resources, advocates for recovery practices and methods that are collaborative and community-based, and contributes to community rebuilding with greater social capital, social cohesion, and resilience (Dominelli, 2015; Drolet, 2019; Drolet et al., 2015)....

    [...]

  • ...…to inequitable access to services and resources, advocates for recovery practices and methods that are collaborative and community-based, and contributes to community rebuilding with greater social capital, social cohesion, and resilience (Dominelli, 2015; Drolet, 2019; Drolet et al., 2015)....

    [...]

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"Women rebuilding lives post-disaste..." refers background in this paper

  • ...(Ungar 2013, 17) This understanding of resilience goes beyond an individual notion, to a more relational and holistic approach....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new international blueprint for disaster risk reduction (DRR) has been adopted in Sendai, Japan, at the end of the Third UN World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction (WCDRR, March 14-18, 2015).
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