Hearing Minority Voices: Institutional Discrimination Towards LGBTQ in Disaster and Recovery

David King
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Abstract

Within the themes of CASCADE NET, this paper focusses on less heard voices and the need to develop new social spaces. Disaster vulnerability identifies diversity in society through a lens of constraints to solutions, on such bases as demography, socio-economic status, cultural, ethnic and gendered minorities within society, and marginalized groups as well as physical proximity to a hazard. The focus of disaster risk reduction is on building resilience through the strengths and capacities in society, but it has a tendency to homogenize characteristics of resilience to the community level, thereby flattening and hiding diversity. LGBTQ people are largely ignored as minority groups with specific information needs. Specific response and recovery processes and actors exacerbate the vulnerability of the LGBTQ minority, especially in evacuation, support, counselling, and rehousing. The role of faith-based organizations (FBO) in providing these services during disaster relief and recovery is examined in this paper. This paper identifies and critiques the attitudes and practices of some FBO towards LGBTQ groups in their provision of disaster relief services.
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倾听少数人的声音:灾难和恢复中对LGBTQ的制度性歧视
在CASCADE NET的主题中,本文关注较少听到的声音和开发新的社交空间的需求。灾害脆弱性通过限制解决办法的各种因素确定社会的多样性,这些因素包括人口、社会经济地位、社会中的文化、族裔和性别少数群体、边缘群体以及离灾害地点的实际接近程度。减少灾害风险的重点是通过社会的优势和能力来建立复原力,但它有一种将复原力特征同质化到社区层面的倾向,从而使多样性扁平化和隐藏起来。LGBTQ人群作为有特定信息需求的少数群体,在很大程度上被忽视了。具体的应对和恢复过程和行为者加剧了LGBTQ少数群体的脆弱性,特别是在疏散、支持、咨询和重新安置方面。本文考察了信仰组织(FBO)在救灾和恢复过程中提供这些服务的作用。本文对一些FBO在提供救灾服务中对待LGBTQ群体的态度和做法进行了识别和批评。
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