Disaster vulnerability and health status are determined by the intersecting social identities individuals possess in a given context. Based on two months fieldwork in Bangladesh, this study employs a comparative exploratory case study methodology to understand the way in which the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), Oxfam and Gonoshasthaya Kendra construct and deploy the concepts of gender, empowerment and women’s health within their disaster management policies and programs. It finds that disaster management interventions that fail to understand the intersectional nature of women’s vulnerability risk entrenching or creating forms of both privilege and oppression. Combining intersectionality, Moser’s Practical and Strategic Ge...
Dramatic increases in the occurrence of natural disasters and their immense impact on physical and s...
When considering disaster risk reduction, it is understandable that people focus on managing disaste...
Paul I. Kadetz - ORCID: 0000-0002-2824-1856 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2824-1856Item not available...
Bangladesh has been hit by many catastrophic natural disasters where flooding has become a recurring...
This research focuses on the gendered impacts of disasters on health and healthcare access. It aims ...
This study focuses on how gender and political engagement contribute to disaster management in Bangl...
Natural disasters have been growing due to climate change, degradation of the environment, and globa...
This study explores disaster, women, vulnerability and changes in women’s lives including the role o...
This chapter surveys literature on gendered livelihoods, disasters and community resilience, and con...
LESSONS FOR PRACTITIONERS • Disaster situations are not ‘freak’ events but reflect the unequal st...
This paper explores the intersection between public health and disaster from a gendered angle. The h...
The need to 'disaster proof' development is increasingly recognised by development agencies, as is t...
This thesis concerns the effects of Cyclone Aila, an extreme weather event that took place in 2009, ...
Climate change effects cause major socioeconomic challenges for marginalized groups, particularly wo...
As the frequency and severity of natural disasters increases due to climate change, thousands of Ban...
Dramatic increases in the occurrence of natural disasters and their immense impact on physical and s...
When considering disaster risk reduction, it is understandable that people focus on managing disaste...
Paul I. Kadetz - ORCID: 0000-0002-2824-1856 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2824-1856Item not available...
Bangladesh has been hit by many catastrophic natural disasters where flooding has become a recurring...
This research focuses on the gendered impacts of disasters on health and healthcare access. It aims ...
This study focuses on how gender and political engagement contribute to disaster management in Bangl...
Natural disasters have been growing due to climate change, degradation of the environment, and globa...
This study explores disaster, women, vulnerability and changes in women’s lives including the role o...
This chapter surveys literature on gendered livelihoods, disasters and community resilience, and con...
LESSONS FOR PRACTITIONERS • Disaster situations are not ‘freak’ events but reflect the unequal st...
This paper explores the intersection between public health and disaster from a gendered angle. The h...
The need to 'disaster proof' development is increasingly recognised by development agencies, as is t...
This thesis concerns the effects of Cyclone Aila, an extreme weather event that took place in 2009, ...
Climate change effects cause major socioeconomic challenges for marginalized groups, particularly wo...
As the frequency and severity of natural disasters increases due to climate change, thousands of Ban...
Dramatic increases in the occurrence of natural disasters and their immense impact on physical and s...
When considering disaster risk reduction, it is understandable that people focus on managing disaste...
Paul I. Kadetz - ORCID: 0000-0002-2824-1856 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2824-1856Item not available...