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GENDER EQUALITY
IN DISASTERS
SIX PRINCIPLES FOR ENGENDERED RELIEF AND RECONSTRUCTION
Gender And Disaster Network
January 2005
1. THINK BIG. Gender
equality and risk reduction principles must guide all aspects of
disaster mitigation, response and reconstruction. The "window
of opportunity" for change and political organization closes
very quickly. Plan now to:
· respond in ways that empower women and local
communities
· rebuild in ways that address the root causes of vulnerability,
including gender and social inequalities
· create meaningful opportunities for women's participation
and leadership
· fully engage local women in hazard mitigation and vulnerability
assessment projects
· ensure that women benefit from economic recovery and income
support programs, e.g. access, fair wages, nontraditional skills
training, child care/social support
· give priority to social services, children's support systems,
women's centers, women's "corners" in camps and other
safe spaces
· take practical steps to empower women, among others:
o consult fully with women in design and operation of emergency
shelter
o deed newly constructed houses in both names
o include women in housing design as well as construction
o promote land rights for women
o provide income-generation projects that build nontraditional skills
o fund women's groups to monitor disaster recovery projects
2. GET THE FACTS. Gender
analysis is not optional or divisive but imperative to direct aid
and plan for full and equitable recovery. Nothing in disaster work
is "gender neutral." Plan now to:
· collect and solicit gender-specific data
· train and employ women in community-based assessment and
follow-up research
· tap women's knowledge of environmental resources and community
complexity
· identify and assess sex-specific needs, e.g. for home-based
women workers, men's mental health, displaced and migrating women
vs. men
· track the (explicit/implicit) gender budgeting of relief
and response funds
· track the distribution of goods, services, opportunities
to women and men
· assess the short- and long-term impacts on women/men of
all disaster initiatives
· monitor change over time and in different contexts
3. WORK WITH GRASSROOTS WOMEN.
Women's community organizations have insight, information, experience,
networks, and resources vital to increasing disaster resilience.
Work with and develop the capacities of existing women's groups
such as:
· women's groups experienced in disasters
· women and development NGOs; women's environmental action
groups
· advocacy groups with a focus on girls and women, e.g. peace
activists
· women's neighborhood groups
· faith-based and service organizations
· professional women, e.g. educators, scientists, emergency
managers
4. RESIST STEREOTYPES.
Base all Initiatives on knowledge of difference and specific cultural,
economic, political, and sexual contexts, not on false generalities:
· women survivors are vital first responders
and rebuilders, not passive victims
· mothers, grandmothers and other women are vital to children's
survival and recovery but women's needs may differ from children's
· not all women are mothers or live with men
· women-led households are not necessarily the poorest or
most vulnerable
· women are not economic dependents but producers, community
workers, earners
· gender norms put boys and men at risk too, e.g. mental
health, risk-taking, accident
· targeting women for services is not always effective or
desirable but can produce backlash or violence
· marginalized women (e.g. undocumented, HIV/AIDS, low caste,
indigenous, sex workers) have unique perspectives and capacities
· no "one-size" fits all: culturally specific needs
and desires must be respected, e.g. women's traditional religious
practices, clothing, personal hygiene, privacy norms
5. TAKE A HUMAN RIGHTS APPROACH.
Democratic and participatory initiatives serve women and girls them
best. Women and men alike must be assured of the conditions of life
needed to enjoy their fundamental human rights, as well as simply
survive. Girls and women in crisis are at increased risk of:
· sexual harassment and rape
· abuse by intimate partners, e.g. in the months and year
following a major disaster
· exploitation by traffickers, e.g. into domestic, agricultural
and sex work
· erosion or loss of existing land rights
· early/forced marriage
· forced migration
· reduced or lost access to reproductive health care services
· male control over economic recovery resources
6. RESPECT AND DEVELOP THE
CAPACITIES OF WOMEN. Avoid overburdening women with already
heavy work loads and family responsibilities likely to increase.
· identify and support women's contributions
to informal early warning systems, school and home preparedness,
community solidarity, socioemotional recovery, extended family care
· materially compensate the time, energy and skill of grassroots
women who are able and willing to partner with disaster organizations
· provide child care, transportation and other support as
needed to enable women's full and equal participation in planning
a more disaster resilient future
MORE INFORMATION:
Gender and Disaster Network: http//online.northumbria.ac.uk/geography_research/gdn/]
Gender Equality and Disaster Risk Reduction Workshop
2004 : www.ssri.hawaii.edu/research/GDWwebsite/pages/proceeding.html
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