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The LGBTI community in the 2011 Queensland floods: marginality, vulnerability and resilience

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posted on 2024-11-14, 06:11 authored by Andrew Gorman-Murray, Sally Morris, Jessica Keppel, Scott McKinnon, Dale Dominey-Howes
Vulnerability to disasters is not inherent to particular social groups but results from existing marginality. Marginalisation from social, political and economic resources and recognition underpins vulnerability and impedes recovery. Yet concurrently, disasters can reveal the resilient capacities of some marginal groups, who often develop specific means of coping with marginality. This paper applies these perspective to the experiences of LGBTI (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, intersex) sexual minorities during the 2011 disasters in Queensland, Australia. The findings come from a survey conducted by the Queensland Association for Healthy Communities (QAHC) a year after the floods. An agreement was established between QAHC and university researchers to facilitate data analysis. This paper analyses some key findings using the concepts of marginality, vulnerability and resilience. The data reveal vulnerability due to social and political marginality, including discrimination and issues of access to assistance, but simultaneously examples of resilience borne by self-reliance in a context of marginality.

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Citation

Gorman-Murray, A., Morris, S., Keppel, J., McKinnon, S. & Dominey-Howes, D. (2014). The LGBTI community in the 2011 Queensland floods: marginality, vulnerability and resilience. LES Online, 6 (1), 4-20.

Journal title

LES Online

Volume

6

Issue

1

Pagination

4-20

Language

English

RIS ID

119649

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