Lessons from Improving a Gender-based Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment

Briefings (non-specific)
, 4 pages
PDF (588.69 KB)
10783IIED.pdf
Language:
English
Published: June 2016
Area(s):
ISBN: 9781784313500
Product code:10783IIED

Indonesian cities are increasingly invested in efforts to build urban resilience, and finding means of resisting, absorbing and recovering from climate change hazards. Despite growing evidence that women, especially in underserved populations, suffer disproportionately from climate change hazards, there are inadequate data and methods for taking adequate account of women’s perspectives in city-level resiliency initiatives.

The Indonesian civil society organisation Kota Kita conducted a study to examine its methodology for undertaking Climate Change Vulnerability Assessments (CCVAs). It focused on how its CCVA process could better assess women’s climate vulnerability for urban planning efforts, the importance of using a gender lens for resiliency planning, and observed several key gender-focused resiliency efforts in Indonesia.

The study found that women’s perspectives were lacking in city-level resilience planning because few women participate in CCVAs. It also found that any data obtained had limitations in terms of its credibility, availability and accessibility, and that institutional capacity for using it was also limited. Finally, it found that gender and resilience development trends could actually reinforce gender discrimination rather than alleviate it.

Cite this publication

Dougherty, S., Taylor, J., Hidayani, R. and Fatimah, D. (2016). Lessons from Improving a Gender-based Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/10783iied