Disaster studies have been slow to address gender issues in the management of disasters. Given the neglect of gender in the previous scholarship on disasters, most of the recent writing on the gendering of disasters has understandably focused on women's experiences in relation to risk management, emergency responses, post-disaster recovery and reconstruction. There has been little interrogation of the ways in which hegemonic masculinity and men's privileged positioning in patriarchal gender regimes impact on the various stages of disaster management. In this paper I draw upon my experience in researching men and masculinities in Australia to draw connections between men's privilege, rural masculinities, men's experiences of trauma, men's violence and men's gendered experience of disasters, especially in relation to bush fires. The paper relates insights arising from these studies to men's responses to disasters, their involvement in disaster management and their post-disaster experiences. The implications of this analysis for a disaster curricula in social work education is outlined.
History
Journal
Advances in Social Work and Welfare Education
Volume
16
Pagination
60-72
Location
Sydney, N.S.W.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
1329-0584
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2014, Australian Association for Social Work and Welfare Education
Issue
2
Publisher
Australian Association for Social Work and Welfare Education