| Literature DB >> 31635331 |
Ashleigh Rushton1, Lesley Gray2,3, Justin Canty4, Kevin Blanchard5.
Abstract
The dominant discourse of gender focuses on the binary of woman/man, despite the known additional risks for diverse sexualities and gender minorities in disasters. Given the small but growing body of literature concerning gender minorities in disasters, this paper sets out to explore the place of sex and gender minorities in disasters and to examine whether a binary definition needs to be extended. A five-stage rapid review was undertaken following Arksey and O'Malley's method. Peer-reviewed journal articles in English language were sought that included disaster and gender terms in the title, abstract, and/or body of the article published between January 2015 and March 2019. The search included MEDLINE and Scopus databases. Relevant information from the studies were charted in Microsoft Excel, and results were summarized using a descriptive analytical method. In total, 729 records were identified; 248 that did not meet the inclusion criteria were excluded and 166 duplicates were removed. A total of 315 records were sourced and their full text was reviewed. Of those, only 12 journal articles included content relative to more than two genders. We also recognized that sex and gender terms were used interchangeably with no clear differentiation between the two. We recommend that disaster scholars and practitioners adopt correct terminology and expand their definition of gender beyond the binary; utilize work on gender fluidity and diversity; and apply this to disaster research, policy, and practice.Entities:
Keywords: binary; disaster; gender; gender minorities; rapid review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31635331 PMCID: PMC6843806 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16203984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Search strategy inclusion and exclusion criteria.
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| Male, men, men’s, man, man’s | ||
| Female, women, women’s, woman, woman’s | ||
| Gender or gender with identit or nonconforming, non-conforming, divers, binary, nonbinary, other, unspecified, nonspecified, non-specified, androgyn, intermediate, minorit, spectrum, cisgender, transgender, trans-gender, transsexual, trans-sexual, queer, lgbt, glbt, twospirit, two spirit, two-spirit, uranian, fa’afafine, faafafine, berdache, pangender, bigender, genderqueer, androgyne, intergender, intersex, third sex, fourth sex, ashtime, mashoga, mangaiko, palao’ana, palaoana, fakaleiti, mahu wahine, mahu vahine, whakawahine, akava’ine, akavaine, waria, warias, baklâ, baklas, binabae, bayot, bantut, bading, femminiello, muxe, biza’ah, bizaah, travesties, xanith, khanith, tritiya-prakrti, ubhatobyanjanaka, pandaka, quariwarmi | ||
| Disaster, earthquake, avalanche, landslide, mudslide, land slide, mud slide, tsunami, tornado, mass casualty, volcan, flood. | ||
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| Included | Included | Excluded |
| Year | 2015 to March 2019 | Pre-2015 and after March 2019 |
| Language | English language articles | Non-English language articles |
| Format | Journal articles | Book or book chapter |
| Disaster | Disaster focus | No disaster focus |
| Gender terms | Articles that did not mention gender or sex terms | |
| Age | Articles focused on infants or children (age 10 and under) | |
| Non-human | Adults | Animals and plants |
| Search terms within articles | ||
| Gender (binary/non-binary), female, male, woman/women, man/men, other gender/sex terms | ||
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis (PRISMA) flow diagram for rapid review article selection.
Rapid review: papers referring to minority genders outside of the binary (n = 12).
| Year | Citation | Beyond Binary Summary |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Myers, A.; Sami, S.; Onyango, M.A.; Karki, H.; Anggraini, R.; Krause, S. Facilitators and barriers in implementing the Minimum Initial Services Package (MISP) for reproductive health in Nepal post-earthquake. | LGBTI |
| 2018 | Gorman-Murray. A.; McKinnon, S.; Dominey-Howes, D.; Nash, C.J.; Bolton, R. Listening and learning: Giving voice to trans experiences of disasters. | Gender minorities |
| 2018 | Dominey-Howes, D.; Gorman-Murray, A.; McKinnon, S. On the disaster experiences of sexual and gender (LGBTI) minorities: Insights to support inclusive disaster risk reduction policy and practice. | Gender minorities |
| 2017 | Wisner, B.; Berger, G.; Gaillard, J.C. We’ve seen the future, and it’s very diverse: Beyond gender and disaster in West Hollywood, California. | Non-binary |
| 2017 | Ong, J.C. Queer cosmopolitanism in the disaster zone: ‘My Grindr became the United Nations’. | LGBTQ |
| 2017 | McKinnon, S.; Gorman-Murray, A.; Dominey-Howes, D. Disasters, queer narratives, and the news: How are LGBTI disaster experiences reported by the mainstream and LGBTI media? | Cisgender |
| 2017 | Gaillard, J.C.; Gorman-Murray, A.; Fordham, M. Sexual and gender minorities in disaster. | Gender and sexual minorities |
| 2017 | Gaillard, J.C.; Sanz, K.; Balgos, B.C.; Dalisay, S.N.; Gorman-Murray, A.; Smith, F.; Toelupe, V.A. Beyond men and women: A critical perspective on gender and disaster. | Aravani |
| 2017 | McKinnon, S.; Gorman-Murray, A.; Dominey-Howes, D. Remembering an epidemic during a disaster: Memories of HIV/AIDS, gay male identities and the experience of recent disasters in Australia and New Zealand. | LGBT |
| 2017 | Yamashita. A.; Gomez, C.; Dombroski, K. Segregation, exclusion and LGBT people in disaster impacted areas: Experiences from the Higashinihon Dai-Shinsai (Great East-Japan Disaster). | LGBT |
| 2015 | Işık, Ö.; Özer, N.; Sayın, N.; Mishal, A.; Gündoğdu, O.; Özçep, F. Are women in Turkey both risks and resources in disaster management? | Transgender groups |
| 2015 | McSherry, A.; Manalastas, E.J.; Gaillard, J.C.; Dalisay, S.N. From deviant to bakla, strong to stronger: Mainstreaming sexual and gender minorities into disaster risk reduction in the Philippines. | Sex and gender minorities |