Gender Dimensions of Disaster Risk and Resilience
Men and women, boys and girls have different experiences of disasters. Gender dynamics impact both the way they are affected by disasters and their capacity to withstand and recover from them. Gender inequalities can result in gender-differentiated disaster impact, and differentiated impacts can influence gender dynamics, which in turn affect future resilience to shocks. Disaster risk management policies are designed to maximize results, taking local conditions - including gender dynamics - as fixed. When women and men are affected differently by disasters, practitioners and policy makers have a responsibility to use the tools available for mitigating disaster impacts to close gender gaps in outcome. An improved understanding of the gender dynamics of disaster risk and resilience also allows for better policy and program design, which benefits all stakeholders.
Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | Report biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2021-02-26
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Subjects: | DISASTER RISK MANAGEMENT, VULNERABILITY, DISASTER RESILIENCE, HAZARD EVENT, NATURAL DISASTER, CORONAVIRUS, COVID-19, PANDEMIC IMPACT, WOMEN'S HEALTH, GENDER, CHILD LABOR, LIVELIHOODS, GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE, WOMEN'S AGENCY, WOMEN'S VOICE, ACCESS TO FINANCE, MIGRATION, SOCIAL PROTECTION, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/926731614372544454/Gender-Dimensions-of-Disaster-Risk-and-Resilience-Existing-Evidence https://hdl.handle.net/10986/35202 |
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Summary: | Men and women, boys and girls have
different experiences of disasters. Gender dynamics impact
both the way they are affected by disasters and their
capacity to withstand and recover from them. Gender
inequalities can result in gender-differentiated disaster
impact, and differentiated impacts can influence gender
dynamics, which in turn affect future resilience to shocks.
Disaster risk management policies are designed to maximize
results, taking local conditions - including gender dynamics
- as fixed. When women and men are affected differently by
disasters, practitioners and policy makers have a
responsibility to use the tools available for mitigating
disaster impacts to close gender gaps in outcome. An
improved understanding of the gender dynamics of disaster
risk and resilience also allows for better policy and
program design, which benefits all stakeholders. |
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