Gendered responses to the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires in Victoria, Australia
- 10 November 2015
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Geographical Research
- Vol. 54 (2), 203-215
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-5871.12162
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
Funding Information
- Bushfire & Natural Hazards Cooperative Research Centre (BNHCRC)
- RMIT University
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Environmental circumstances surrounding bushfire fatalities in Australia 1901–2011Environmental Science & Policy, 2014
- Gendered Risk Engagement: Challenging the Embedded Vulnerability, Social Norms and Power Relations in Conventional Australian Bushfire EducationGeographical Research, 2013
- After ‘Black Saturday’: Adapting to Bushfires in a Changing ClimatePublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2013
- Householders’ safety-related decisions, plans, actions and outcomes during the 7 February 2009 Victorian (Australia) wildfiresFire Safety Journal, 2013
- Bushfires are “men's business”: The importance of gender and rural hegemonic masculinityJournal of Rural Studies, 2013
- Community safety during the 2009 Australian 'Black Saturday' bushfires: an analysis of household preparedness and responseInternational Journal of Wildland Fire, 2013
- The gendered dimensions of bushfire in changing rural landscapes in AustraliaJournal of Rural Studies, 2010
- Influence of Location, Population, and Climate on Building Damage and Fatalities due to Australian Bushfire: 1925–2009Weather, Climate, and Society, 2010
- Australian bushfire fatalities 1900–2008: exploring trends in relation to the ‘Prepare, stay and defend or leave early’ policyEnvironmental Science & Policy, 2010
- Not the same old hindsight bias: Outcome information distorts a broad range of retrospective judgmentsMemory & Cognition, 2005