1. Enhancing and expanding intersectional research for climate change adaptation in agrarian settings.
- Author
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Thompson-Hall M, Carr ER, and Pascual U
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Research, Adaptation, Psychological, Agriculture methods, Climate Change, Developing Countries, Gender Identity
- Abstract
Most current approaches focused on vulnerability, resilience, and adaptation to climate change frame gender and its influence in a manner out-of-step with contemporary academic and international development research. The tendency to rely on analyses of the sex-disaggregated gender categories of 'men' and 'women' as sole or principal divisions explaining the abilities of different people within a group to adapt to climate change, illustrates this problem. This framing of gender persists in spite of established bodies of knowledge that show how roles and responsibilities that influence a person´s ability to deal with climate-induced and other stressors emerge at the intersection of diverse identity categories, including but not limited to gender, age, seniority, ethnicity, marital status, and livelihoods. Here, we provide a review of relevant literature on this topic and argue that approaching vulnerability to climate change through intersectional understandings of identity can help improve adaptation programming, project design, implementation, and outcomes.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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