The Intersectionality of Gender, Sexual Identity, and Disability in Disaster Risk Reduction in OECD Countries: A Rapid Scoping Review

Author:

Crawford Tonia12ORCID,Chang Kuo-yi Jade2ORCID,Nila Farhana2,Subramaniam Parvathi2,Bethune Loriana3,Parkinson Debra3,Villeneuve Michelle2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney 2006, Australia

2. Centre for Disability Research and Policy, The University of Sydney, Sydney 2006, Australia

3. Monash Accident Research Centre, Monash University, Clayton 3168, Australia

Abstract

People with disability are disproportionally affected by disasters due to layers of marginalisation from an interaction of personal, social, economic, political, and environmental factors. These intersect with gender, gender identity, and sexual orientation, and result in additional discrimination and social exclusion that reinforce inequality and stigma. There has been little focus on the intersection of disability and gender in disability-inclusive disaster risk reduction (DIDRR) in high-income countries. This paper reports on a scoping review exploring the intersection of gender and sexual identity and disability in disaster in both peer-reviewed and grey literature. Building greater awareness of the specific needs of marginalised groups such as women, gender, and sexually diverse people into DIDRR will reduce the disproportionate impacts of disaster on these groups.

Funder

Gender and Disaster Australia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Engineering

Reference35 articles.

1. World Health Organization, and The World Bank (2011). World Report on Disability, World Health Organization.

2. Erman, A., De Vries Robbe, S.A., Fabian Thies, S., Kabir, K., and Maruo, M. (2021). Gender Dimensions of Disaster Risk and Resilience, World Bank.

3. Kelman, I., and Stough, L. (2015). Disability and Disaster: Explorations and Exchanges, Palgrave Macmillan US.

4. Le Masson, V. (2023, June 30). Gender and Resilience: From Theory to Practice. BRACED Knowledge Manager. Available online: https://odi.org/en/publications/gender-and-resilience-from-theory-to-practice/.

5. Emergency preparedness and perceptions of vulnerability among disabled people following the Christchurch earthquakes: Applying lessons learnt to the Hyogo Framework for Action;Phibbs;Australas. J. Disaster Trauma Stud.,2015

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