The female performance in adapting to climate change in urban space. A case study in the Peruvian Amazon

被引:0
|
作者
Lozano Ramirez, Juan Joel [1 ]
机构
[1] Pontificia Univ Catolica Peru, Lima, Peru
来源
ENCRUCIJADAS-REVISTA CRITICA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES | 2016年 / 11卷
关键词
climate change; climate variability; adaptation; traditional Knowledge; health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D58 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
摘要
This article explores the effects of climate change and climate variability on human health, placing the emphasis on adaptation strategies constructed by social actors in the Human Settlement Nuevo Punchana, located in the flood fringe of the city of Iquitos department of Loreto, one of the most important urban axes of the Peruvian Amazon. The research tries to demonstrate, on the basis of qualitative and quantitative information, on the one hand, the impacts of the (increasingly frequent and intense due to climate change) severe flooding are mediated by gender, and, on the other that social actors construct adaptation strategies to climate stimuli, crisscrossed performances, too, gender differences. Although at first glance the female segment could be classified as the most vulnerable to climate change (inequities structural gender, by its special status) research provides evidence that women are key agents in building adaptation strategies and response aimed at dealing with it. It is further evidence that these strategies have their substrate in the reproduction of traditional knowledge (such as collective work or minga and practice of traditional medicine) "transported" to the city by migrants from mostly rural Amazon, and the deployment of knowledge acquired in the city. The staging of these strategies depend largely female intervention, as are those that "distribute" the capital in the town studied, that is, local cultural resources in the family and community levels.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Impacts of Climate Change on Extreme Precipitation Events and Urban Waterlogging: A Case Study of Beijing
    Ji, Xinyu
    Dong, Wenxuan
    Wang, Wei
    Dai, Xin
    Huang, Hong
    NATURAL HAZARDS REVIEW, 2024, 25 (01)
  • [32] Adapting to climate change: using urban renewal in managing long-term flood risk
    Zevenbergen, C.
    Veerbeek, W.
    Gersonius, B.
    Thepen, J.
    van Herk, S.
    FLOOD RECOVERY, INNOVATION AND RESPONSE, 2008, 118 : 221 - +
  • [33] Stakeholders' engagement in the process of adapting to climate change impacts. A case of central Tanzania
    Mkonda, Msafiri Yusuph
    MANAGEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 2022, 33 (04) : 975 - 990
  • [34] Urban flood modelling and climate change: A Melbourne area case study
    Molavi, S.
    Muttil, N.
    Tran, H. D.
    19TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION (MODSIM2011), 2011, : 3608 - 3614
  • [35] Measuring Climate Change Impact on Urban Microclimate: a Case Study of Concepcion
    Tumini, Irina
    Rubio-Bellido, Carlos
    WORLD MULTIDISCIPLINARY CIVIL ENGINEERING-ARCHITECTURE-URBAN PLANNING SYMPOSIUM 2016, WMCAUS 2016, 2016, 161 : 2290 - 2296
  • [36] Evaluating and Adapting Climate Change Impacts on Rice Production in Indonesia: A Case Study of the Keduang Subwatershed, Central Java']Java
    Ansari, Andrianto
    Lin, Yu-Pin
    Lur, Huu-Sheng
    ENVIRONMENTS, 2021, 8 (11)
  • [37] Urban Stormwater Management, a Tool for Adapting to Climate Change: From Risk to Resource
    Hernandez-Hernandez, Maria
    Olcina, Jorge
    Morote, Alvaro-Francisco
    WATER, 2020, 12 (09)
  • [38] Adapting to Climate Change: Lessons from Farmers and Peri-Urban Fringe Residents in South Australia
    Robinson, Guy M.
    Bardsley, Douglas K.
    Raymond, Christopher M.
    Underwood, Tegan
    Moskwa, Emily
    Weber, Delene
    Waschl, Nicolette
    Bardsley, Annette M.
    ENVIRONMENTS, 2018, 5 (03) : 1 - 16
  • [39] Evaluating the Effectiveness of Best Management Practices in Adapting the Impacts of Climate Change-Induced Urban Flooding
    Bhusal, Amrit
    Thakur, Balbhadra
    Kalra, Ajay
    Benjankar, Rohan
    Shrestha, Aruna
    ATMOSPHERE, 2024, 15 (03)
  • [40] Vulnerability and adaptive capacity of community food systems in the Peruvian Amazon: a case study from Panaillo
    Sherman, Mya
    Ford, James
    Llanos-Cuentas, Alejandro
    Jose Valdivia, Maria
    Bussalleu, Alejandra
    NATURAL HAZARDS, 2015, 77 (03) : 2049 - 2079