Barriers and Facilitators to Engaging Communities in Gender-Based Violence Prevention following a Natural Disaster.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2015 Nov; 26(4):1377-90.JH

Abstract

Humanitarian workers in disaster settings report a dramatic increase in gender-based violence (GBV). This was true after the 2010 Haiti earthquake when women and girls lost the relative security of their homes and families. Researchers from the United States Virgin Islands and the United States mainland responded by collaborating with Haitian colleagues to develop GBV-focused strategies. To start, the research team performed a situational analysis to insure that the project was culturally, ethically, and logistically appropriate. The aim of this paper is to describe how the situational analysis framework helped the researchers effectively approach this community. Using post-earthquake Haiti as an exemplar, we identify key steps, barriers, and facilitators to undertaking a situational analysis. Barriers included logistics, infrastructure, language and community factors. Facilitators included established experts, organizations and agencies. Researchers in such circumstances need to be respectful of community members as experts and patient with local environmental and cultural conditions.

Links

Publisher Full Text
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
muse.jhu.edu
PMC Free PDF

Authors

Sloand E
No affiliation info available
Killion C
No affiliation info available
Gary FA
No affiliation info available
Dennis B
No affiliation info available
Glass N
No affiliation info available
Hassan M
No affiliation info available
Campbell DW
No affiliation info available
Callwood GB
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Battered WomenCommunity NetworksCommunity ParticipationCultural CharacteristicsDisastersEarthquakesEnvironmentFemaleHaitiHumansInternational CooperationRelief WorkUnited StatesUnited States Virgin IslandsViolence

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

Language

eng

PubMed ID

26548685