Catarina Kinnvall is Professor at the Department of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden. Helle Rydström is Professor at the Department of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden.
Ranging far and wide - geographically, conceptually, and by topic - the Climate Hazards, Disasters, and Gendered Ramifications edited collection presents a multi-sided, critical feminist set of perspectives on the gendered politics of disaster, hazards and climate change. This is an important book in bringing together, and demonstrating the intertwining of, two of the most urgent challenges of the contemporary and future worlds: climate change and continuing gender domination. - Jeff Hearn, Professor, Hanken School of Economics, Finland; OErebro University, Sweden, University of Huddersfield, UK; author of Men of the World This is a book about connections: between disasters and the everyday; between the abstract domain of theory and the concrete lived experiences of people; between academic disciplines; and between the many intersecting axes of difference that comprise the gendered person. In revealing these complex and nuanced connections, in a range of settings and circumstances, in ways that are both theoretically and empirically strong, the editors shine a critical feminist light on what is, too often, a simplistic and naturalised space of climate hazards and disasters. This will be an important reference text on the meaning of a truly gender responsive approach for scientists, policymakers, academics and students of many disciplines. - Professor Maureen Fordham. Centre Director, IRDR Centre for Gender and Disaster, University College London (UCL) Climate Hazards, Disasters, and Gendered Ramifications couldn't be more timely. Gender research is currently under attack in many parts of the world and climate change denial is alarmingly commonplace in the era of the Anthropocene. Focusing on the human challenges of living with climate hazards, this book shows with great theoretical insight and solid empirical research how climate-related disasters are intrinsically gendered, and how best we can deal with their ramifications in order to reduce risk for men and women alike. A multi-disciplinary, multi-methodological, and global volume which is bound to bring scholars, students, practitioners and policymakers up-to-date. Read it! - Susann Baez Ullberg, Associate Senior Lecturer, Uppsala University, Sweden; and the co-founder and former coordinator of the European Association of Social Anthropologists 'Disaster and Crisis Anthropology Network (DICAN)'