How to encourage more female staff in disaster response

This is the second article in a two-piece series looking at the impact of gender balance in humanitarian surge staff and the challenges women and girls face when responding to a disaster.

When a disaster strikes, surge staff are the first ones deployed to assess and implement what is most needed on the ground. While disasters can disproportionately affect women, they only make up 40 percent of surge staff according to research report conducted by ActionAid and CARE International last year. In particular regions, this can be significantly lower. For example, only 27 percent of surge staff deployed in Pakistan are female.

A more gender-balanced staff could help response efforts be more inclusive for those affected and could help reduce incidents of sexual abuse in disaster response. Kathleen O’Brien, surge capacity coordinator of CARE International, stresses, “in the communities we serve, women’s organizations and individual women are already playing a key role as frontline responders for those affected by crisis. Surge capacity of international humanitarian organizations has to reflect this reality to help make connections between local female capacity and the international response. There’s never been a more important time to be a part of it.”

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