2015
DOI: 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2015.12089.x
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Women, Gender Norms, and Natural Disasters in Bangladesh

Abstract: Women and men are impacted differently by natural disasters, leading to claims that there exist gendered disaster vulnerabilities and a "gendered terrain of disasters" (Enarson and Morrow 1998). What makes this contention even more academically and practically relevant are recent increases in the number of natural disasters and affectees (Guha-Sapir and others 2004; Paul 2011). The confluence of gender and disaster is particularly clear in Bangladesh, a country challenging twin specters of gender issues and an… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(39 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
(21 reference statements)
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“…Vulnerability is primarily controlled by social, economic, and demographic factors that coalesce to influence the capacity of individuals and communities to mitigate, cope with, and reduce disaster risk (Hewitt 1997;Comfort et al 1999;Juran and Trivedi 2015). In general, a population with relatively greater socioeconomic status, access to resources, and built environment attributes is less vulnerable and typically performs better during and after disaster events.…”
Section: Vulnerability Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vulnerability is primarily controlled by social, economic, and demographic factors that coalesce to influence the capacity of individuals and communities to mitigate, cope with, and reduce disaster risk (Hewitt 1997;Comfort et al 1999;Juran and Trivedi 2015). In general, a population with relatively greater socioeconomic status, access to resources, and built environment attributes is less vulnerable and typically performs better during and after disaster events.…”
Section: Vulnerability Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Physical scientists, for example, tend to conceptualize vulnerability in terms of the likelihood of occurrence of a specific process and associated impacts on the built environment (Papathoma-Kohle et al 2011;Fuchs et al 2012). Social scientists tend to define vulnerability as a set of social, economic, and demographic factors that coalesce to determine people's ability to cope with stressors (Wisner et al 2004;Juran and Trivedi 2015). In reality, the biophysical environment interacts with social attributes and systems to reveal vulnerability, meaning that vulnerability is socially constructed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the extent to which policies achieve their intended goals is variable. Cyclone shelters are installed to provide shelter during and after extreme events, yet women and girls are often reluctant to stay in public shelters where they may have to interact with men, to maintain honour and avoid shame and harassment (Rashid and Michaud 2002;Juran and Trivedi 2015). Poverty can constrain household adaptation choice.…”
Section: Adapting To Present Day Stressesmentioning
confidence: 99%