| Literature DB >> 27878531 |
Houria Djoudi1, Bruno Locatelli2, Chloe Vaast3, Kiran Asher4, Maria Brockhaus5, Bimbika Basnett Sijapati6.
Abstract
Climate change and related adaptation strategies have gender-differentiated impacts. This paper reviews how gender is framed in 41 papers on climate change adaptation through an intersectionality lens. The main findings show that while intersectional analysis has demonstrated many advantages for a comprehensive study of gender, it has not yet entered the field of climate change and gender. In climate change studies, gender is mostly handled in a men-versus-women dichotomy and little or no attention has been paid to power and social and political relations. These gaps which are echoed in other domains of development and gender research depict a 'feminization of vulnerability' and reinforce a 'victimization' discourse within climate change studies. We argue that a critical intersectional assessment would contribute to unveil agency and emancipatory pathways in the adaptation process by providing a better understanding of how the differential impacts of climate change shape, and are shaped by, the complex power dynamics of existing social and political relations.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Climate change; Gender; Intersectionality
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27878531 PMCID: PMC5120018 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0825-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Keywords used in the literature search
| Group | Terms |
|---|---|
| Study scope (climate change and rural livelihoods) | Climate* AND (society OR “rural communit*” OR “local communit*” OR “local people” OR livelihood* OR “Indigenous people” OR “community household*” OR “rural household*” OR “farmer household*” OR “forest household*” OR “farming communit*” OR farmer* OR fisherfolk OR fisherm* OR “livestock keeper*” OR rancher* OR “forest dweller*” OR “forest people*”) |
| Mitigation | Mitigation OR REDD OR “Emissions from Deforestation” OR CDM OR “Clean Development” OR “carbon project*” OR “carbon payment*” OR “carbon offset*” OR “carbon sequestration” OR “carbon storage” OR “carbon absorption” |
| Adaptation | Adapt* OR vulnerab* OR resilien* OR coping OR cope |
| Gender | Gender OR women OR “female villager*” OR “female headed” OR “female farmer*” OR “female member*” |
Intersectionality dimensions considered and guiding questions for the review
| Dimension of intersectionality | Guiding questions applied to code the articles |
|---|---|
| Intersecting categories | 1. Which social categories where included in the vulnerability analysis? |
| Multilevel analysis | 3. Did the analysis include vulnerability impacts and dynamics affecting institutions and relationships across various levels of society? |
| Power | 5. How was power framed in the papers? |
| Emancipation patterns, agency and resistance | 8. Are they results from case studies that document changes in power relations and social structures associated with environmental change and the social process of adaptation to it? |
Guiding questions for the review of vulnerability and adaptive capacity
| Guiding questions used for the data analysis and to code the articles | |
|---|---|
| 1. Did the paper include in its gender rationale how different gender groups are exposed differently to climate variations and change? |
Frequency of gender-relevant approaches and findings in the reviewed papers
| Gender-relevant aspects of the reviewed papers | Frequencya |
|---|---|
| Approach or framework | |
| Paper based on case studies | *** |
| Findings | |
| Intersectionality | |
| Consideration of two categories (i.e. men and women) | **** |
| Consideration of age as a variable in addition to gender in the analysis | *** |
| Consideration of ethnicity as a variable in addition to gender in the analysis | *** |
| Consideration of profession as a variable in addition to gender in the analysis | *** |
| Consideration of wealth as a variable in addition to gender in the analysis | ** |
| Focus on differentiated perceptions of exposure and impacts, rather than differentiated vulnerability | – |
| Use of equity and rights-based perspectives as a rationale for gender integration | * |
| Analysis of social and political power relations | – |
| Consideration of existing intersectional inequalities | – |
| Agency and emancipatory pathways | |
| Adaptation to climate change leads to social shift in relation to gender | *** |
| Women are adaptable and play an important role in household adaptation | *** |
| Men and women have different coping or adaptation strategies | *** |
| Adaptive strategies have gender-differentiated outcomes | *** |
| Migration is one of a number of male-dominated strategies expected to impact gender relationships | ** |
| Consideration of women’s agency, active choices and engagement | * |
| Men and women perceive different adaptation needs | * |
| Men and women play different roles in the implementation of one specific adaptation activity | * |
| Vulnerability and adaptive capacity | |
| Divergent perceptions are explained by gendered livelihood activities, roles and responsibilities | **** |
| Assets and context increase vulnerability and barriers to adaptation for women | **** |
| Assumption or general statement that women are more vulnerable than men | *** |
| Focus on the perceptions of climate variations, rather than their implications for the vulnerability of individuals or households | ** |
| Men and women have different perceptions of climate variations, their causes and impacts | ** |
| Women and men are impacted differently by climate variability | ** |
| Evidence that women are more vulnerable than men based on case studies at the local level | * |
| Vulnerability of female-headed households is evidenced | * |
| Consideration of differentiated intra-households vulnerabilities | * |
| Divergent perceptions are explained by women’s vulnerability | * |
aRefers to the frequency of this approach or to findings in the reviewed papers: no papers: “–”, * Very few papers: less than 10 % of papers, ** few papers: from 10 % to less than 20 %, *** some papers: from 20 % to less than 40 %, **** many papers: more than 40 %)