This book elaborates on diverse dominant practices of masculinity in disasters and how this shapes recovery and resilience. Original studies in diverse environmental, hazard, and cultural contexts highlight the high costs paid by men emotionally, and how diverse forms of masculinities shape their efforts to respond and recover from disasters and to cope with extreme weather and other climate challenges. The final chapters demonstrate men's diverse strategies for challenging hierarchies in disasters, including around gender, sexuality, disability, age, and culture.
This book elaborates on diverse dominant practices of masculinity in disasters and how this shapes recovery and resilience. Original studies in diverse environmental, hazard, and cultural contexts highlight the high costs paid by men emotionally, and how diverse forms of masculinities shape their efforts to respond and recover from disasters and to cope with extreme weather and other climate challenges. The final chapters demonstrate men's diverse strategies for challenging hierarchies in disasters, including around gender, sexuality, disability, age, and culture.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Elaine Enarson is an independent scholar based in Colorado, USA. Bob Pease is Professor of Social Work at the University of Tasmania, Australia.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Section 1: Critical men's studies and disaster 1. The Gendered Terrain of Disaster: Thinking About Men and Masculinities 2. Masculinism, Climate Change and 'Man-Made' Disasters: Towards an Environmental Profeminist Response 3. Men and Masculinities in the Social Movement for a Just Reconstruction After Hurricane Katrina 4. Hyper-Masculinity and Disaster: The Reconstruction of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Wake of Calamity 5. Re-Reading Gender and Patriarchy Through a 'Lens of Masculinity:' The 'Known' Story and New Narratives From Post-Mitch Nicaragua Section 2: The high cost of disaster for men: Coping with loss and change 6. Men, Masculinities and Wildfire: Embodied Resistance and Rupture 7. Emotional and Personal Costs for Men of the Black Saturday Bushfires in Victoria, Australia 8. The Tsunami's Wake: Mourning and Masculinity in Eastern Sri Lanka 9. Japanese Families Decoupling Following the Fukushima Nuclear Plant Disaster: Men's Choice between Economic Stability and Radiation Exposure Section 3: Diversity of impact and response among men in the aftermath of disaster 10. Disabled Masculinities and Disasters 11. Masculinity, Sexuality and Disaster: Unpacking Gendered LGBT Experiences in the 2011 Brisbane Floods, Queensland, Australia 12. Indigenous Masculinities in a Changing Climate: Vulnerability and Resilience In the United States 13. Youth Creating Disaster Recovery and Resilience in Canada and the United States: Dimensions of the Male Youth Experience Section 4: Transforming masculinity in disaster management 14. Firefighters, Technology and Masculinity in the Micro-management of Disasters: Swedish Examples 15. Resisting and Accommodating the Masculinist Gender Regime in Firefighting: An Insider View from the United Kingdom 16. Using a Gendered Lens to Reduce Disaster and Climate Risk in Southern Africa: The Potential Leadership of Men's Organizations 17. Training Pacific Male Managers for Gender Equality in Disaster Response and Management 18. Integrating Men and Masculinities in Caribbean Disaster Risk Management 19. Men, Masculinities and Disaster: An Action Research Agenda 20. Afterword
Foreword Section 1: Critical men's studies and disaster 1. The Gendered Terrain of Disaster: Thinking About Men and Masculinities 2. Masculinism, Climate Change and 'Man-Made' Disasters: Towards an Environmental Profeminist Response 3. Men and Masculinities in the Social Movement for a Just Reconstruction After Hurricane Katrina 4. Hyper-Masculinity and Disaster: The Reconstruction of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Wake of Calamity 5. Re-Reading Gender and Patriarchy Through a 'Lens of Masculinity:' The 'Known' Story and New Narratives From Post-Mitch Nicaragua Section 2: The high cost of disaster for men: Coping with loss and change 6. Men, Masculinities and Wildfire: Embodied Resistance and Rupture 7. Emotional and Personal Costs for Men of the Black Saturday Bushfires in Victoria, Australia 8. The Tsunami's Wake: Mourning and Masculinity in Eastern Sri Lanka 9. Japanese Families Decoupling Following the Fukushima Nuclear Plant Disaster: Men's Choice between Economic Stability and Radiation Exposure Section 3: Diversity of impact and response among men in the aftermath of disaster 10. Disabled Masculinities and Disasters 11. Masculinity, Sexuality and Disaster: Unpacking Gendered LGBT Experiences in the 2011 Brisbane Floods, Queensland, Australia 12. Indigenous Masculinities in a Changing Climate: Vulnerability and Resilience In the United States 13. Youth Creating Disaster Recovery and Resilience in Canada and the United States: Dimensions of the Male Youth Experience Section 4: Transforming masculinity in disaster management 14. Firefighters, Technology and Masculinity in the Micro-management of Disasters: Swedish Examples 15. Resisting and Accommodating the Masculinist Gender Regime in Firefighting: An Insider View from the United Kingdom 16. Using a Gendered Lens to Reduce Disaster and Climate Risk in Southern Africa: The Potential Leadership of Men's Organizations 17. Training Pacific Male Managers for Gender Equality in Disaster Response and Management 18. Integrating Men and Masculinities in Caribbean Disaster Risk Management 19. Men, Masculinities and Disaster: An Action Research Agenda 20. Afterword
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