Literature DB >> 33314308

Intersectional vulnerability in post-disaster contexts: lived experiences of Dalit women after the Nepal earthquake, 2015.

Shubhda Arora1.   

Abstract

Through a narrative-based ethnographic study of the Nepal earthquake of 2015, this study aims to comprehend Nepali women's experiences of relief and rehabilitation. It adopts an intersectional approach to vulnerability and privileges the voices of marginalised women in post-disaster contexts. The paper draws out some troubling experiences, including stories of rampant alcoholism, drug abuse, illegal trafficking, prostitution, self-harm, and suicide. These cases are more pronounced among Dalit women, who also face institutionalised violence in the form of unequal access to aid, dignity kits, and safe spaces, among other resources. Such discrimination makes Dalit women from poor socioeconomic backgrounds more vulnerable in post-disaster settings. In the case of Nepal, relief and rehabilitation processes failed to understand and address intersectional vulnerability, and in some ways, became part of the problem. By examining the accounts of women from different castes and classes, this paper argues, therefore, for an intersectional approach to investigating vulnerability in the wake of disasters.
© 2021 The Authors Disasters © 2021 ODI.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dalit women; caste; class; gender-based violence; intersectional vulnerability; lived experiences; oral narratives

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 33314308     DOI: 10.1111/disa.12471

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Disasters        ISSN: 0361-3666


  5 in total

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4.  Where is my home?: Gendered precarity and the experience of COVID-19 among women migrant workers from Delhi and National Capital Region, India.

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Journal:  Gend Work Organ       Date:  2021-05-16

5.  Experience of Vulnerable Women Narrated through the Body-Mapping Technique.

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Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-12-11       Impact factor: 3.390

  5 in total

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