Engendering Climate Change : : Learnings from South Asia.

This book focuses on the gendered experiences of environmental change across different geographies and social contexts in south Asia and on diverse strategies of adapting to climate variability.

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Place / Publishing House:Milton : : Taylor & Francis Group,, 2021.
©2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (262 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • List of figures
  • List of tables
  • List of contributors
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgements
  • Chapter 1: Gender, climate change and the politics of vulnerability: An introduction
  • Introduction
  • Gender and climate change: a view from South Asia
  • Contributions to the volume
  • Unpacking vulnerabilities: intersections of geography and social identity
  • Adaptive strategies: agricultural diversification, migration and collective action
  • Migration as adaptation
  • Collective action and resilience
  • Conclusion
  • Note
  • References
  • Part I: Vulnerabilities
  • Chapter 2: Vulnerabilities of rural women to climate extremes: A case of semi-arid districts in Pakistan
  • Introduction
  • Contextual background
  • Evidence from the field: climate change and vulnerabilities for women
  • Class matters
  • Inter-generational dynamics and decision making
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 3: Gendered vulnerabilities in Diaras : Struggles with floods in the Gandak river basin in Bihar, India
  • Introduction
  • Diaras: A land knee deep under water
  • The socio-economic context and changing climatic conditions in West Champaran
  • Understanding gendered vulnerabilities
  • Gendered vulnerabilities in West Champaran
  • "We need more men in our homes"
  • Multiple vulnerabilities of work and migration
  • Role of institutions in times of flood
  • Conclusion: Surviving and adapting to change in the diaras
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 4: Of borewells and bicycles : The gendered nature of water access in Karnataka, South India and its implications for local vulnerability
  • Introduction: water scarcity, social-ecological dynamics and gender
  • Context and methodology
  • Context
  • Methodology
  • Findings: the changing waterscape of Kolar.
  • Drought, water scarcity and climate variability in Kolar
  • Changing livelihoods and natural resources in Kolar
  • Changes in land use and cropping patterns
  • Institutional shifts in water management: from the kere system to individual groundwater extraction
  • Borewells and the atomization of water access for irrigation
  • Bicycles and the informalization of drinking water access
  • Implications of changing water access for gendered vulnerability and local adaptive capacity
  • Notes
  • References
  • Annex 4
  • Chapter 5: Vulnerabilities and resilience of local women towards climate change in the Indus basin
  • Introduction
  • Gender and climate change in the Indus basin
  • Study locations and methodology
  • Women's perception of climate change
  • Impact of climate change on women in the upstream basin
  • Women's perception of climate change in the mid-stream basin
  • High rainfall zone (Tehsil Murree)
  • Medium rainfall zone (Chakri)
  • Low rainfall zone (Tehsil Talagang)
  • Women's perception of climate change in the downstream basin
  • Learning from women's vulnerabilities and responses to the changing climate
  • References
  • Chapter 6: Climate change, gendered vulnerabilities and resilience in high mountain communities: The case of Upper Rasuwa in Gandaki River Basin, Hindu Kush Himalayas
  • Introduction
  • Research methodology and study area
  • Conceptualizing gendered vulnerabilities
  • Gender roles and responsibilities
  • Transhumance herding, livestock and farming
  • Eco-agro tourism, home stay and handicrafts
  • Migration, social capital, finance
  • Trade and other economic activities
  • Saving and credit activities
  • Gendered vulnerabilities, capabilities and adaptation
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • References
  • Part II: Adaptation and Wellbeing
  • Chapter 7: Wells and well-being in South India : Gender dimensions of groundwater dependence.
  • Introduction
  • Context and methodology
  • Cropping patterns and divisions of labour
  • Gendered assets
  • Gold
  • Livestock
  • Borewells and indebtedness
  • Household cooperation, conflict and decision making
  • Female-headed households
  • Groundwater and gendered well-being
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 8: Gender, migration and environmental change in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta in Bangladesh
  • Introduction
  • Unpacking migration
  • Gendered migration patterns
  • Environmental change and migration
  • Gendered effects of environmental migration
  • Investigating migration through a household survey
  • Migration patterns in Bangladesh
  • Who migrates, where, why and for how long?
  • Displacement
  • Effects of migration on migrant-sending areas
  • Future environmental change and migration
  • References
  • Chapter 9: Women-headed households, migration and adaptation to climate change in the Mahanadi Delta, India
  • Introduction
  • The Mahanadi Delta
  • Coastal hazard and migration
  • Household survey: methodology and data analysis
  • Women-headed households in the Mahanadi Delta
  • Vulnerability and women-headed households
  • Migration and women-headed households
  • Adaptation and women-headed households
  • Conclusion: women-headed households in climate change
  • Notes
  • References
  • Annexure 9
  • Chapter 10: Gender dynamics and climate variability: Mapping the linkages in the Upper Ganga Basin in Uttarakhand, India
  • Introduction
  • Framework and methodology
  • Overview of the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework - a gendered approach
  • Data collection and analysis
  • Study area
  • Demographic profile
  • Research findings and discussion
  • Prevalence of climatic variability in the upper Ganga Basin
  • People's perception of climatic variability and its perceived impacts
  • Perceived climatic variability in the plains.
  • Perceived climatic variability in mid- and high elevations
  • Gendered institutions: the action arena
  • Action situation 1: accessing water for domestic use
  • Action situation 2: agriculture activities
  • Exploring gender relation patterns in the three elevations
  • Gendered institutions: dynamic, complex and diverse?
  • Gendered rules, norms and rights: rigid, flexible or fluid?
  • Social relations, position and mobility: inclusive, partially inclusive or exclusive for all?
  • Willingness to learn, evolve and adapt to climatic variability: intrinsic or socially contingent?
  • Conclusions
  • Note
  • References
  • Chapter 11: Shaping gendered responses to climate change in South Asia
  • Introduction
  • An evolving gendered framework for climate change research
  • Power across geographical locations: inter- and intra-household relations
  • Communities and gendered impact of climate change: risk management through adaptive strategies
  • Expanding the fiscal and governance framework in South Asia
  • Building capacities for gendered research in climate change: unpacking methodology and epistemology
  • References
  • Index.