Displaying 37 - 54 of 129
Women are central actors in building disaster resilience
“Our ability to adapt is what resilience is all about. Being resilient can help us overcome hardship.”
Building an enabling environment for addressing the gender inequalities of risk in Solomon Islands
Establishing coordination mechanisms and providing capacity development
Counting Women in Fiji for risk-informed development
The importance of gender-responsive risk assessments for inclusive development planning
Climate justice means involving gender and sexual minorities in policy and action
A series of workshops in Indonesia and the Philippines have given a platform to LGBTIQ+ leaders
The struggle of a women-led business in Vanuatu
Vanuatu micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) are facing parallel disasters
Women are helping build resilient infrastructure
Vara's advocacy resulted in a new cyclone resilient market building, so: "when Cyclone Harold came, this market was here. The vendors were safe here."
Gender responsive finance interventions are central to tackling climate change
Three reflections on gender in disaster risk management
Leading the way in Solomon Islands: Mary Alalo
4 assumptions about gender that distort how we think about climate change (and 3 ways to do better)
Palau upholds gender equality, social inclusion in disaster risk management
'You never know if you will be treated properly and with respect."
Tuvalu Coastal Adaptation Project empowering women and girls
How climate finance can address violence against women and girls
Walk a mile in her shoes: Building rural women’s climate-resilience in the wake of COVID-19
Why should local disaster-risk-reduction-strategies wear gender lens for girls’ safety?
Men are advocating for women's economic empowerment
Semi believes that men have an important role to play in transforming the social norms that discriminate against women.
Women are advocating for better access to agriculture services
Laisa shared that as a woman from a farming family, and now running her own farm, she is not always taken seriously.