A gender analysis of perceived climate change trends and ecosystems-based adaptation in the Nigerian wooded savannah

Agenda ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 16-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grace Oloukoi ◽  
Mayowa Fasona ◽  
Felix Olorunfemi ◽  
Vide Adedayo ◽  
Peter Elias
Author(s):  
Arja Rautio ◽  
Natalia Kukarenko ◽  
Lena Maria Nilsson ◽  
Birgitta Evengard

Climate change in the Arctic affects both environmental, animal, and human health, as well as human wellbeing and societal development. Women and men, and girls and boys are affected differently. Sex-disaggregated data collection is increasingly carried out as a routine in human health research and in healthcare analysis. This study involved a literature review and used a case study design to analyze gender differences in the roles and responsibilities of men and women residing in the Arctic. The theoretical background for gender-analysis is here described together with examples from the Russian Arctic and a literature search. We conclude that a broader gender-analysis of sex-disaggregated data followed by actions is a question of human rights and also of economic benefits for societies at large and of the quality of services as in the health care.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mona Daoud

AbstractMost climate change literature tends to downplay the gendered nature of vulnerability. At best, gender is discussed in terms of the male-female binary, seen as opposing forces rather than in varying relations of interdependency. Such construction can result in the adoption of maladaptive culturally unfit gender-blind policy and interventions. In Egypt, which is highly vulnerable to climate change, gender analysis of vulnerability is almost non-existent. This paper addresses this important research gap by asking and drawing on a rural Egyptian context ‘How do the gendered relational aspects of men’s and women’s livelihoods in the household and community influence vulnerability to climate change?’. To answer this question, I draw on gender analysis of social relations, framed within an understanding of sustainable livelihoods. During 16 months of fieldwork, I used multiple ethnographic methods to collect data from two culturally and ethnically diverse low-income villages in Egypt. My main argument is that experiences of climate change are closely intertwined with gender and wider social relations in the household and community. These are shaped by local gendered ideologies and cultures that are embedded in conjugal relations, kinship and relationship to the environment, as compared across the two villages. In this paper, I strongly argue that vulnerability to climate change is highly gendered and therefore gender analysis should be at the heart of climate change discourses, policy and interventions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 30-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Owombo P.T. ◽  
Koledoye G.F. ◽  
Ogunjimi S.I. ◽  
Akinola A.A. ◽  
Deji O.F. ◽  
...  

NATAPRAJA ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Theny I. B. Kurniati Pah

Communities in the District of Malaka periodically are hit by floods and droughts caused by climate change. Lack of food makes people have to adjust for the sake of survival. Roles, social relationships, responsibilities and division of labor between men and women also can change when trying to meet the needs of such food as a result of climate change. Matriaki culture is embraced by the people of Malacca and geographical environment often affected influential in the division of labor between men and women every day. Harvard Gender Analysis techniques used in this study to look at the impact of climate change and gender relations are formed in three patterns of food production (production, distribution and consumption) that occurs in the three affected areas in the district of Malaka.Keywords: Disaster, Culture Matriarchy, Gender Analysis Technique Harvard.


2020 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 104247
Author(s):  
Elsie Assan ◽  
Murari Suvedi ◽  
Laura Schmitt Olabisi ◽  
Kenneth Joseph Bansah

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