Framing Community Resilience Through Mobility and Gender

被引:8
作者
Otsuki, Kei [1 ]
Jasaw, Godfred Seidu [1 ]
Lolig, Victor [2 ]
机构
[1] UNU, Inst Adv Study Sustainabil, IAS, Shibuya Ku, Tokyo, Japan
[2] UDS, Tamale, Ghana
关键词
community resilience; gender; livelihood diversification; mobility; network; social relationship;
D O I
10.20965/jdr.2014.p0554
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The study of community resilience observed in times of crisis has conventionally focused on the impact of external forces on sedentary and homogeneous communities embedded in specific ecological systems. Drawing on a qualitative case study of a rural community in northern Ghana, this paper reports that, even in a community of mostly small farmers, diversifying livelihoods is apparently a main coping strategy. This paper focuses on two, often overlooked, dimensions that underpin this livelihood diversification: mobility and gender. Mobility, the first dimension, indicates the work of livelihoods that develop outside the community such as the so-called "settler farming," a variety of trading activities, and outmigration to cities. Gender, the second dimension, indicates cropping and commercial activities carried out differently by men and women. Both mobility and gender characterize diverse livelihood strategies, which evolve by enriching social relationships and extending networks. This paper argues that shedding light on social relationships and networks helps us to reframe the concept of community resilience from the community-based capacity of self-organization to the capacity of a flexible social system for being able to mobilize a wide variety of resources. Future research agendas must advance this understanding of resource mobilization in relation to ecological resilience and must clarify its technological and policy implications.
引用
收藏
页码:554 / 562
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Resilience through a multisystemic perspective: analyzing individual, family, and community systems [J].
Ferrer, Laia Pi ;
Selvam, Rejina M. ;
Cavallotti, Rita .
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2025, 44 (08) :7651-7664
[32]   Building sustainable community resilience and business preparedness through stakeholder perspective [J].
Soomro, Shuaib Ahmed .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SERVICES, 2023, 12 (02) :171-185
[33]   Representation of Gender Through Framing: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Hillary Clinton's Selected Speeches [J].
Kanwal, Safina ;
Garcia, Maria Isabel Maldonado .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LINGUISTICS, 2019, 9 (02) :321-331
[34]   Changes in transitions: the role of mobility, class and gender [J].
Smith, Douglas I. .
JOURNAL OF EDUCATION AND WORK, 2009, 22 (05) :369-390
[35]   Selling cruises: Gender and mobility in promotional brochures [J].
Vanolo, Alberto ;
Cattan, Nadine .
TOURIST STUDIES, 2017, 17 (04) :406-425
[36]   Gender, Mobility Regimes, and Social Transformation in Asia [J].
Martin, Fran ;
Dragojlovic, Ana .
JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL STUDIES, 2019, 40 (03) :275-286
[37]   Vulnerability, gender and resistance in transnational academic mobility [J].
Mählck P. .
Tertiary Education and Management, 2018, 24 (3) :254-265
[38]   Gender disparities in rural accessibility and mobility in Ghana [J].
Adom-Asamoah, Gifty ;
Amoako, Clifford ;
Adarkwa, Kwasi Kwafo .
CASE STUDIES ON TRANSPORT POLICY, 2020, 8 (01) :49-58
[39]   Gender and mobility: new approaches for informing sustainability [J].
Hanson, Susan .
GENDER PLACE AND CULTURE, 2010, 17 (01) :5-23
[40]   The Effect of Resilience and Gender on the Persistence of Higher Education Students [J].
Cegledi, Timea ;
Fenyes, Hajnalka ;
Pusztai, Gabriella .
SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL, 2022, 11 (03)