Adaptation outcomes in climate-vulnerable locations: understanding how short-term climate actions exacerbated existing gender inequities in coastal Bangladesh. Ahmed, S., Eklund, E., & Kiester, E. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 66(13):2691–2712, 2023.
Adaptation outcomes in climate-vulnerable locations: understanding how short-term climate actions exacerbated existing gender inequities in coastal Bangladesh [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Adverse climate impacts present a significant challenge for the majority of the world’s population. It is especially true for smallholder farmers in coastal Bangladesh, where some adaptation initiatives appeared to be short-sighted and reproduced further inequity, poverty, and food insecurity. Based on empirical insights, this paper shows how short-sighted climate responses can adversely affect gender equity, illustrated through three adaptation strategies. First, agricultural institutions have traditionally and historically linked with gender roles. Outmigration from the region is gendered as males leave first. This forces increased household and farm responsibilities onto female household members and increased vulnerability. This gendered vulnerability becomes compounded by the ways critical weather information flows at the local level. Taking this gendered lens, this paper illustrates how shrimp farming has caused long-term woes for society. These insights help in understanding the complexity of climate–society interactions and the importance of long-term planning on any climate adaptation initiatives. © 2022 Newcastle University.
@article{ahmed_adaptation_2023,
	title = {Adaptation outcomes in climate-vulnerable locations: understanding how short-term climate actions exacerbated existing gender inequities in coastal {Bangladesh}},
	volume = {66},
	url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85132209780&doi=10.1080%2f09640568.2022.2082928&partnerID=40&md5=4c2c1934add25248a18fe7f0a03cf54f},
	doi = {10.1080/09640568.2022.2082928},
	abstract = {Adverse climate impacts present a significant challenge for the majority of the world’s population. It is especially true for smallholder farmers in coastal Bangladesh, where some adaptation initiatives appeared to be short-sighted and reproduced further inequity, poverty, and food insecurity. Based on empirical insights, this paper shows how short-sighted climate responses can adversely affect gender equity, illustrated through three adaptation strategies. First, agricultural institutions have traditionally and historically linked with gender roles. Outmigration from the region is gendered as males leave first. This forces increased household and farm responsibilities onto female household members and increased vulnerability. This gendered vulnerability becomes compounded by the ways critical weather information flows at the local level. Taking this gendered lens, this paper illustrates how shrimp farming has caused long-term woes for society. These insights help in understanding the complexity of climate–society interactions and the importance of long-term planning on any climate adaptation initiatives. © 2022 Newcastle University.},
	number = {13},
	journal = {Journal of Environmental Planning and Management},
	author = {Ahmed, S. and Eklund, E. and Kiester, E.},
	year = {2023},
	keywords = {Kalapara, coastal Bangladesh, gender inequity, health challenges, migration, short-sighted adaptation, weather and climate information},
	pages = {2691--2712},
}

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