Engendering development and disasters

作者: Sarah Bradshaw

DOI: 10.1111/DISA.12111

关键词:

摘要: Over the last two decades different impacts of disasters on women and men have been acknowledged, leading to calls integrate gender into disaster risk reduction response. This paper explores how evolving understandings ways integrating development influenced this process, critically analysing contemporary initiatives 'engender' that see inclusion for both efficiency equality gains. It has argued resulted in a 'feminisation responsibility' can reinforce rather than challenge relations. The construction affected by as an at-risk group means reduce suggests similar processes feminisation. argues if are women's vulnerability, they need focus explicitly root causes vulnerability design programmes specifically reducing inequalities challenging unequal gendered power Language: en

参考文章(60)
Rosalind Eyben, The rise of rights: rights-based approaches to international development Institute of Development Studies (UK). ,(2003)
Sarah Bradshaw, Gender, Development and Disasters ,(2013)
Russell R. Dynes, Coming to Terms with Community Disaster Disaster Research Center. ,(1997)
David L. Brunsma, J. Steven Picou, David Overfelt, The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe ,(2007)
Elaine Pitt Enarson, Emmanuel David, The women of Katrina : how gender, race, and class matter in an American disaster Vanderbilt University Press. ,(2012)
Sarah Bradshaw, Socio-economic impacts of natural disasters: a gender analysis Research Papers in Economics. ,(2004)