ABSTRACT

Drawing a transdisciplinary perspective, this book investigates the ways in which gender intersect with rebuilding and post-disaster recovery process. It shows how climate-induced disasters as well as the recent COVID-19 pandemic have impacted human lives and livelihoods across various global socioeconomic conditions, sociopolitical conditions, and the gendered relationships from the Global South perspective.

From the real experiences of the people vulnerable to disasters, this book identifies the strengths and weaknesses of the post-disaster management in different contexts. The varied roles and responsibilities of men and women in different countries are also examined. It is often hard to understand how local and global politics are involved in humanitarian aid. This book also shows how lower-income and under-privileged communities are deprived of their right to access relief and rehabilitation due to political involvement.

This text also highlights effective methods of policy implementation for achieving sustainable recovery from these humanitarian crises. It will assist strategy planners and policymakers to focus on gender-based barriers and political hindrances as well as geological and socioeconomic factors in planning inclusive post-disaster activities. The book will be of interest to researchers, postgraduate students and scholars in the fields of Sociology, Social Anthropology, Development Studies, Gender and Cultural Studies, Area Studies, Human Geography, Disaster Management, Forestry and Environmental Science. 

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

Integrating a gender perspective into disaster risk management

An analysis of the Global Assessment Reports on Disaster Risk Reduction 1

chapter Chapter 3|26 pages

Local governments' Provisions and Sections in Disaster

Lesson Learned from the Post-Pandemic Era

chapter Chapter 9|21 pages

The local heritage ‘Dhopkols’

Build back better water access in reducing gender-based vulnerabilities in Bangladesh

chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

Financing climate-induced disaster management

How to engage the formal financial sector?

chapter Chapter 12|16 pages

Gender Dimensions in Disaster Risks Reduction Policy

Insights from Bangladesh

chapter Chapter 13|9 pages

Concluding Remarks

The State of the Art of Research in Gender, Disaster and Cultural Studies