Abstract:
Bangladesh is a vulnerable country because of its distinctive socio-economic and physical
characteristics. Every year near about 10 million people are affected directly or indirectly because of
living in climatic vulnerable countries. Historically Bangladesh lies to the threat ended categories of
land and natural hazards. However, natural disaster causes uneven vulnerabilities for both men and
women. Waterlogging is one of the disasters that causes serious crisis upon human livelihood patterns.
It also creates challenges upon human daily living condition. We faced various kinds of vulnerability
because of lacking sufficient purred drinking water and balanced food. Waterlogging sometimes
continues from a day to several months. Human life become tough because of employment
opportunities, proper communication system and so on. Waterlogging also interrupts regular activities
of the educational institutions and damages agricultural crops. Likewise, all other natural disasters
waterlogging leads to equal damage in the nature but the burden of copping with disaster, vulnerabilities
and mitigation process lies mostly on women’s shoulder is known as engendering disaster. This study
indicates that during disaster women are responsible to take care of their family members (e.g.,
arranging food for their family members, nursing injured people, special care for aged people and
children, cooking for family members, collecting drinking water from distant places, etc.). The broad
purpose of this study is to address women’s strategic roles and indigenous coping mechanisms in
reducing vulnerabilities induced by waterlogging in the study area. Again, the specific objectives of the
study include exploring consequences of waterlogging on women, addressing, women’s role in reducing
risk in the context of economic and social vulnerability, identifying the gender aware steps to reduce
the negative impacts of waterlogging on women, identifying the women’s role in disasters preparedness
including reconstruction, rehabilitation and resilience and addressing strategies of sustainable disaster
risk reduction.
The conceptual framework of the study indicates that, the higher the vulnerability of women, the lower
the adaptation and thus existence of waterlogging situation persists. On the other hand, the lower the
access to decision making both inside and outside family, health care service, education, income the
higher the adaptation and the outcome is the prolonged vulnerability of waterlogging. The current study
followed the triangulation of qualitative and quantitative method. The ‘universe of units’ for this study
for quantitative data were only females who have experienced and affected by waterlogging. A semi
structured questionnaire was used in this study as tool for collecting quantitative data from 400 females
from four villages under the DND embankment area in Narayanganj district. Furthermore, six FGDs,
25 case studies and six KII have been conducted to gather information about the nature of
vulnerabilities, coping mechanisms followed by women role played by women to mitigate
vulnerabilities and problems encountered by women effective as effective managers.
The Monthly income ranged between: BDT 1000- 10,000 plus and the expenditure incurred by the
respondents ranged between: BDT 1000 and 10,000 plus. The housing pattern of the respondents of the
study area shows that most of the respondents lived in semi-pakka houses. Over 70% of the respondents
found illiterate. However, the majority of the respondents (75%) were housewives. Findings of the study
also show that peak season of waterlogging is between the months of May-October and according to
the respondents it continues from 7-120 days based on extreme climatic variability and weather
condition (e.g., heavy rain). Findings of this study has revealed that women’s vulnerability enhances
due to unequal access to basic services, like access to income and related opportunities, improve health
care service, access to proper sanitation, dual work burden and non-recognition of their contribution
and also socio-cultural barriers to participate in disaster and reconstruction processes. Women become
sufferer of domestic brutality and sexual aggravation and sometimes, under compulsion get themselves
engaged in prostitution to maintain their family livelihoods in absence of earning male members.
However, the traditional social structure and patriarchal societal norms made maximal women of the
survey area worst victims of waterlogging as the findings confirms.
As the findings suggest, the women rarely used any indigenous coping mechanisms on their own. They
occasionally assist their male family members in undertaking actions to ensure their survival. Because
of the severity of the situation, the majority of respondents (59.2%) indicated their coping techniques
were ineffective. Furthermore, the findings reveal that, in normal circumstances, 15.8% of women can
make decisions both within and beyond their families. The remaining women reported that they were
unable to perform their leadership roles both within and outside the house. In contrast, the majority of
respondents (90.5%) were able to play a decision-making role during a disaster. The study's findings
indicated several immoral behaviors, such as politicization, land encroachment, and unlawful buildings
in wetland areas. Industries were established on agricultural land, and industrial waste was poured down
the drain, causing the natural flow of water to be interrupted.
In this study the qualitative in-depth findings complemented and supplemented the quantitative
findings. The recommendations and strategies include for future research placed in the dissertation have
been extracted from the suggestions and observations during field research.