Gendered effects of climate change and health inequities among forcibly displaced populations: Displaced Rohingya women foster resilience through technology

Roseanne C. Schuster , Karin Wachter , Faheem Hussain , Meredith L. Gartin
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Abstract

Climate change interacts with social and biological factors to exacerbate the vulnerabilities and health inequities of people in displacement, with particularly severe implications for women and girls. In 2022, over 100 million people –1 in every 78 people in the world – were forced to flee their homes to a location within or beyond their country's borders, due to climatic or other man-made catastrophes. Most displaced people are housed in communities already experiencing climatic stress, exacerbating the risk of water insecurity, food insecurity, disease, struggles over resources, marginalization, and conflict between host and displaced populations. Amid the social upheaval caused by displacement, we call for a gendered approach to fostering resilience, with a particular emphasis on women. In this perspective piece, we advocate for policy and program changes that respond to the unique challenges and circumstances of displaced women and locally derived solutions that promote resilience. We start by providing an overview of health inequities during displacement, exacerbated by climate change, and then examine how gender interacts with displacement to shape women's health and wellbeing. We close with an illustrative example of Rohingya women displaced in Bangladesh who have adapted technology to combat climate change and mitigate social and health inequities to build resilience, even under severe restrictions. Gender-informed research on health, climate change, and resilience in contexts of humanitarian disasters and mass population displacement can elucidate the effectiveness of culturally- and contextually- specific interventions over the short- and long-term.

气候变化的性别影响与被迫流离失所人口的健康不平等:流离失所的罗兴亚妇女通过技术提高复原力
气候变化与社会和生物因素相互作用,加剧了流离失所者的脆弱性和健康不平等,对妇女和女童的影响尤为严重。2022 年,由于气候或其他人为灾难,全世界每 78 人中就有 1 亿多人被迫逃离家园,前往本国境内或境外。大多数流离失所者被安置在已经遭受气候压力的社区,这加剧了水源不安全、粮食不安全、疾病、资源争夺、边缘化以及东道国和流离失所者之间冲突的风险。在流离失所造成的社会动荡中,我们呼吁采取性别方法来增强复原力,并特别强调妇女。在这篇视角文章中,我们倡导对政策和项目进行改革,以应对流离失所妇女所面临的独特挑战和环境,并在当地提出促进恢复力的解决方案。首先,我们概述了流离失所期间因气候变化而加剧的健康不平等问题,然后探讨了性别问题如何与流离失所问题相互作用,进而影响妇女的健康和福祉。最后,我们以孟加拉国流离失所的罗兴亚妇女为例,说明她们即使在严格的限制条件下,也能利用技术应对气候变化,缓解社会和健康方面的不平等,从而增强抗灾能力。在人道主义灾难和大规模人口流离失所的背景下,对健康、气候变化和抗灾能力进行基于性别的研究,可以阐明针对特定文化和背景的短期和长期干预措施的有效性。
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
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68 days
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