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Gender, Development and Disasters [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 256 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-May-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 184980446X
  • ISBN-13: 9781849804462
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 134,04 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 256 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-May-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 184980446X
  • ISBN-13: 9781849804462
The need to 'disaster proof' development is increasingly recognized by development agencies, as is the need to engender both development and disaster response. This unique book explores what these processes mean for development and disasters in practice.Sarah Bradshaw critically examines key notions, such as gender, vulnerability, risk, and humanitarianism, underpinning development and disaster discourse. Case studies are used to demonstrate how disasters are experienced individually and collectively as gendered events. Through consideration of processes to engender development, it problematizes women's inclusion in disaster response and reconstruction. The study highlights that while women are now central to both disaster response and development, tackling gender inequality is not. By critically reflecting on gendered disaster response and the gendered impact of disasters on processes of development, it exposes some important lessons for future policy.

This timely book examines international development and disaster policy which will prove invaluable to gender and disaster academics, students and practitioners.

Contents: Introduction 1. What is a Disaster? 2. What is Development? 3. Gender, Development and Disasters 4. Internal and International Response to Disaster 5. Humanitarianism and Humanitarian Relief 6. Reconstruction or Transformation? 7. Case Studies of Secondary Disasters 8. Political Mobilisation for Change 9. Disaster Risk Reduction Conclusion: Drawing the Links: Gender, Disasters and Development Bibliography Index

Recenzijas

Gender, Development and Disasters is a valuable and essential call for all parties to be attuned to the enormous complexities involved in incorporating gender into a disaster response... This book implores us to be gender reflective at every level. For those of us working in disaster response, we need to learn from development's positive and negative practices regarding gender, rather than simply lifting gender debates out of development and inserting them into a disaster context - if nothing else, it assumes that gender in development is working. It is a difficult but vital truth: we still aren't getting gender right. This book offers a real chance for us to reflect, and to change.' -- Beth Evans, Gender & Development 'Disaster research owes a lot to development studies and yet the debt is often not acknowledged. In this scholarly but accessible book by Sarah Bradshaw, we see a very effective linking of gender, disaster and development that will be of value to academics and practitioners working in and across all these domains.' -- Maureen Fordham, University of Northumbria, UK 'Bringing gender into the foreground in both development and disaster discourse, the author challenges received wisdom and offers cautionary notes about reinforcing inequalities through feminized disaster interventions. The book is an outstanding platform for fundamental change in how we think about and act toward gender in disaster contexts, leaving readers cautiously optimistic. This is one for the top shelf - a book we have been waiting for and must put to use.' -- Elaine Enarson, founder, Gender and Disaster Resilience Alliance

Acknowledgements viii
Introduction ix
1 What is a disaster?
1(22)
Introduction
1(1)
What is a disaster?
1(5)
Vulnerability
6(9)
Risk
15(6)
Drawing the links: disasters and development
21(2)
2 What is development?
23(18)
Introduction
23(1)
Early ideas around development
24(3)
Development theorising
27(3)
The origins of the contemporary development landscape
30(3)
Conceptualising well being and gendered well being
33(5)
Drawing the links: development and disasters
38(3)
3 Gender, development and disasters
41(20)
Introduction
41(1)
Gender as construct
41(3)
Feminisms
44(2)
Integrating women and gender into development
46(6)
Engendering development
52(4)
The World Bank engendering development
56(2)
Drawing the links: engendering disasters
58(3)
4 Internal and international response to disaster
61(24)
Introduction
61(1)
Response and rescue
61(3)
Gendered actions for response and rescue
64(4)
Livelihoods and coping strategies
68(4)
Social networks and community response
72(4)
Determinants of the level of external response
76(7)
Drawing the links: women?s (in)visibility within rescue and response
83(2)
5 Humanitarianism and humanitarian relief
85(16)
Introduction
85(1)
Classical humanitarianism
86(2)
Complex political emergencies as gendered conflicts
88(3)
?New? humanitarianism
91(4)
Relief aid in practice
95(4)
Drawing the links: longer-term implications of short-term relief
99(2)
6 Reconstruction or transformation?
101(19)
Introduction
101(2)
Projects for reconstruction
103(3)
Lessons not learnt
106(3)
Gender issues in reconstruction
109(5)
The impact of reconstruction on women and households: the case of Nicaragua
114(4)
Drawing the links: reconstruction for transformation?
118(2)
7 Case studies of secondary disasters
120(17)
Introduction
120(1)
Violence
120(7)
Psychosocial impact
127(8)
Drawing the links: what is the disaster
135(2)
8 Political mobilisation for change
137(19)
Introduction
137(1)
National and international plans for reconstruction
138(3)
Civil society in post-disaster reconstruction
141(6)
Gendered participation post disaster
147(7)
Drawing the links: participation, fragmentation and feminisation
154(2)
9 Disaster Risk Reduction
156(22)
Introduction
156(1)
The evolution in conceptualising Disaster Risk Reduction
156(4)
Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction
160(2)
Disasters and the development agenda
162(7)
Feminisation of development and disaster discourse
169(7)
Drawing the links: globalisation or feminisation of responsibility?
176(2)
Conclusion - Drawing the links: gender, disasters and development 178(8)
Bibliography 186(41)
Index 227
Sarah Bradshaw, Principal Lecturer in Development Studies, Middlesex University, UK