Conflict and Covid-19: exploring the effects on women

Outi Donovan
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Abstract

What happens when conflicts collide with major disease pandemics? Weak or fragmented institutions, contested legitimacy of authorities, overstretched or destroyed health sector, crowded refugee camps and population flows are but some of the characteristics of conflict-affected societies rendering them vulnerable to pandemics such as Covid-19. Importantly, societal crises are deeply gendered; women and men experience conflicts and are affected by them in profoundly different ways. Focusing on the ‘first wave’ of Covid-19 in 2020, I map out the gendered impacts of Covid-19 in conflict-affected societies with particular focus on women. I situate their experience of the dual crisis in the context of ‘vulnerability multipliers’ that limit the ability of individuals to manage societal crises. I find that the pandemic and policy responses to it exacerbated multiple forms of gendered insecurity. They include physical, economic and health insecurities as well as increasing political marginalisation. All this points to multiple, overlapping insecurities operating simultaneously, leading to ‘layered violence’ whereby the pre-existing violence against women and girls escalates, subjecting them to more intense forms of harm.
冲突与Covid-19:探讨对妇女的影响
当冲突与重大疾病大流行发生冲突时会发生什么?机构薄弱或支离破碎、当局合法性受到质疑、卫生部门过度紧张或遭到破坏、难民营拥挤和人口流动,这些都是受冲突影响的社会的一些特征,使它们容易受到Covid-19等大流行病的影响。重要的是,社会危机与性别有着深刻的关系;妇女和男子经历冲突,并以截然不同的方式受到冲突的影响。我以2020年2019冠状病毒病“第一波”为重点,阐述了2019冠状病毒病对受冲突影响社会的性别影响,特别关注妇女。我把他们的双重危机经历置于“脆弱性乘数”的背景下,它限制了个人管理社会危机的能力。我发现,这一大流行病及其应对政策加剧了多种形式的性别不安全。其中包括人身、经济和健康方面的不安全感,以及日益加剧的政治边缘化。所有这些都表明多重重叠的不安全感同时起作用,导致“分层暴力”,即先前针对妇女和女孩的暴力升级,使她们受到更严重的伤害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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