Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia

The often-neglected intersection between disaster and disability in disaster management initiatives perpetuates a disproportionate impact on people with disabilities, reinforcing existing barriers and eroding overall resilience. Through an exploration of personal perspectives among 17 people with so...

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Published in:COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES
Main Authors: Setijaningrum, Erna; Kassim, Asiyah; Soegiono, Agie Nugroho; Ariawantara, Putu Aditya Ferdian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001169547900001
author Setijaningrum
Erna; Kassim
Asiyah; Soegiono
Agie Nugroho; Ariawantara
Putu Aditya Ferdian
spellingShingle Setijaningrum
Erna; Kassim
Asiyah; Soegiono
Agie Nugroho; Ariawantara
Putu Aditya Ferdian
Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
Social Sciences - Other Topics
author_facet Setijaningrum
Erna; Kassim
Asiyah; Soegiono
Agie Nugroho; Ariawantara
Putu Aditya Ferdian
author_sort Setijaningrum
spelling Setijaningrum, Erna; Kassim, Asiyah; Soegiono, Agie Nugroho; Ariawantara, Putu Aditya Ferdian
Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES
English
Article
The often-neglected intersection between disaster and disability in disaster management initiatives perpetuates a disproportionate impact on people with disabilities, reinforcing existing barriers and eroding overall resilience. Through an exploration of personal perspectives among 17 people with socially determined, self-identified disabilities amidst Indonesia's disaster landscapes, we seek insights on amplified risks but also resilience pathways carved through cumulative exposures. Despite infrastructure barriers exacerbating disaster anxieties, there was resilience exhibited by people supporting one another through wisdom gained from repeated exposures, thus countering their exclusion. Findings also reveal societal forces sustaining unequal marginalization through stigma, yet unexpectedly cultivating solidarity as disability groups unite amid crises. Herein lies an appeal to leverage currently overlooked capabilities by meaningfully engaging disabled experts with lived experience navigating exclusion to guide context-driven strategies that fill gaps when systems fall short. We thus respond to calls for inclusive paradigms championing priority-setting participation of people with disabilities in directing equitable resilience initiatives benefitting all. Looking ahead, at the intersection of disability and disaster, the stage is set for more participatory efforts that embed disabled individuals as leaders to champion inclusion and social justice in the face of intensifying risks as more equitable communities are built. This research explores the lived experiences of 17 people with disabilities during disasters in East Java, Indonesia. Despite growing government commitments to disability inclusion, people with disabilities still face amplified risks and barriers when catastrophes hit. The study reveals how inaccessible infrastructure, fractured communication channels and dismissive attitudes sideline disabled citizens, obstructing evacuation and access to essential post-disaster services. However, the conversations also spotlight remarkable resilience as participants supported one another by sharing wisdom accrued through recurrent turbulent exposures. Hence while validating exclusion, findings uniquely contribute textured insights illuminating sociocultural forces shaping both adversity and solidarity. Looking ahead, the study underscores twin imperatives: dismantling barriers perpetuating unequal treatment amidst crises, alongside championing participatory involvement of disabled individuals to guide context-driven strategies that fill gaps when systems fall short. Ultimately, the research calls for inclusive paradigms that embed disabled experts as leaders to champion accessibility, social justice and equitable resilience.
TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
2331-1886

2024
10
1
10.1080/23311886.2024.2319376
Social Sciences - Other Topics
gold
WOS:001169547900001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001169547900001
title Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
title_short Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
title_full Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
title_fullStr Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
title_sort Beyond tokenism, toward resilience: furthering a paradigmatic shift from intersecting narratives of disaster and disability realities in East Java, Indonesia
container_title COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES
language English
format Article
description The often-neglected intersection between disaster and disability in disaster management initiatives perpetuates a disproportionate impact on people with disabilities, reinforcing existing barriers and eroding overall resilience. Through an exploration of personal perspectives among 17 people with socially determined, self-identified disabilities amidst Indonesia's disaster landscapes, we seek insights on amplified risks but also resilience pathways carved through cumulative exposures. Despite infrastructure barriers exacerbating disaster anxieties, there was resilience exhibited by people supporting one another through wisdom gained from repeated exposures, thus countering their exclusion. Findings also reveal societal forces sustaining unequal marginalization through stigma, yet unexpectedly cultivating solidarity as disability groups unite amid crises. Herein lies an appeal to leverage currently overlooked capabilities by meaningfully engaging disabled experts with lived experience navigating exclusion to guide context-driven strategies that fill gaps when systems fall short. We thus respond to calls for inclusive paradigms championing priority-setting participation of people with disabilities in directing equitable resilience initiatives benefitting all. Looking ahead, at the intersection of disability and disaster, the stage is set for more participatory efforts that embed disabled individuals as leaders to champion inclusion and social justice in the face of intensifying risks as more equitable communities are built. This research explores the lived experiences of 17 people with disabilities during disasters in East Java, Indonesia. Despite growing government commitments to disability inclusion, people with disabilities still face amplified risks and barriers when catastrophes hit. The study reveals how inaccessible infrastructure, fractured communication channels and dismissive attitudes sideline disabled citizens, obstructing evacuation and access to essential post-disaster services. However, the conversations also spotlight remarkable resilience as participants supported one another by sharing wisdom accrued through recurrent turbulent exposures. Hence while validating exclusion, findings uniquely contribute textured insights illuminating sociocultural forces shaping both adversity and solidarity. Looking ahead, the study underscores twin imperatives: dismantling barriers perpetuating unequal treatment amidst crises, alongside championing participatory involvement of disabled individuals to guide context-driven strategies that fill gaps when systems fall short. Ultimately, the research calls for inclusive paradigms that embed disabled experts as leaders to champion accessibility, social justice and equitable resilience.
publisher TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
issn 2331-1886

publishDate 2024
container_volume 10
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1080/23311886.2024.2319376
topic Social Sciences - Other Topics
topic_facet Social Sciences - Other Topics
accesstype gold
id WOS:001169547900001
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001169547900001
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