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Gender, Disaster and Trust

Gender, Disaster and Trust. Why Women?. Women as a Vulnerable Population Gender and Household Division of Labor Gendered Response to Risk. Why Trust.

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Gender, Disaster and Trust

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  1. Gender, Disaster and Trust

  2. Why Women? • Women as a Vulnerable Population • Gender and Household Division of Labor • Gendered Response to Risk

  3. Why Trust • Rousseau, et al (1998) “Trust is a psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations of the intentions of behavior of another” • Frewer, et al (1998) notes the level of trust one has towards a particular organization can affect on how individuals analyze risk

  4. Metlay: Two dimensional model of Trust Competence: On a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 means not at all competent in dealing with hurricanes and their effect on residents, and 10 means completely competent, please rate each of the following… Preparedness: On a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 means not at all prepared to provide disaster relief following a hurricane, and 10 means completely prepared, please rate each of the following… Integrity Credibility: On a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 means not at all believable and 10 means completely believable, please rate each of the following:ed, please rate each of the following… • Local Fire Department • Local Police Department • Local Rescue/Ambulance Agency

  5. Education (Class) & Trust • Yamagishi (2001) notes that individuals with more formal education demonstrate higher levels of trust • 1: Up to HS/GED • 2: Some post-HS • 3: College or More

  6. Class Hypotheses • H1: Women with more education will have higher levels of competence-based trust than women with less education • H2: Women with more education will have higher levels of integrity-based trust than women with less education

  7. Race & Trust • Tyler (2001) He argues that “quality of treatment” such as being treated justly or fairly will impact an individual’s trust in that organization.

  8. Race Hypotheses: (The Kanye Hypothesis) • H3:White women will have higher levels of integrity-based trust than Black women • H4: White women will have higher levels of integrity-based trust than Hispanic women • H5: White women will have higher levels of competence-based trust Black women • H6: White women will have higher levels of competence-based trust than Hispanic Women

  9. An Intersectionality Approach • Crenshaw (1994) an interdisciplinary theoretical framework focused on the intersection of identity categories such as race and gender • Browne and Misra (2003): Race is ‘gendered’ and gender is ‘racialized’ • Enarson, Fothergill and Peck (2006): disaster research is rarely specifically focused on the intersection of race, class and gender

  10. Intersectionality Hypotheses • H7: As education increases, all women, regardless of race, show similar levels of competency based trust • H8: As education increases, all women, regardless of race, show similar levels of integrity based trust.

  11. Why Texas & Florida?:Pew Survey 2008(in thousands)

  12. Data: Sampling • Surveys administered September 13-27, 2006 • Survey Sampling International, online • Database of 18000 clients, restricted to registered addresses with zip codes in hurricane-threatened counties of Florida or Texas • Either on the Gulf Coast or 1-2 counties removed • Average: 35 minutes • Median: 24 minutes • Compensation: $2.50, chance for $5000

  13. Data: Description

  14. VARIABLES CompFirCompPolCompAmbPrepFirPrepPolPrepAmbCredFirCredPolCredAmb • Black ‐0.477*** ‐0.645*** ‐0.413*** ‐0.546*** ‐0.435*** ‐0.522*** ‐0.732*** ‐0.621*** ‐0.533*** • [0.149] [0.155] [0.155] [0.169] [0.166] [0.166] [0.168] [0.155] [0.150] • Hispanic ‐0.141 ‐0.146 ‐0.117 ‐0.219 ‐0.285 ‐0.068 ‐0.275 ‐0.276* ‐0.186 • [0.161] [0.168] [0.163] [0.177] [0.183] [0.169] [0.169] [0.165] [0.163] • Florida 0.385*** 0.410*** 0.431*** 0.306*** 0.387*** 0.392*** 0.144* 0.124* 0.160** • [0.0729] [0.0783] [0.0743] [0.0771] [0.0808] [0.0776] [0.0800] [0.0731] [0.0741] • Constant 7.894*** 7.581*** 7.777*** 7.827*** 7.571*** 7.721*** 7.605*** 8.020*** 7.989*** • [0.0591] [0.0638] [0.0610] [0.0607] [0.0655] [0.0623] [0.0630] [0.0579] [0.0594] • N 2510 2631 2533 2517 2605 2532 2706 2578 2576 • R‐squared 0.017 0.02 0.019 0.014 0.015 0.016 0.011 0.011 0.009

  15. Table 1a: RACE and TRUST (Baseline Model)

  16. Table 1b: EDUCATION and RACE and TRUST (Baseline Model)

  17. Table 1c: RACE, EDCUATION and TRUST (Baseline Model)

  18. Table 2a: RACE and TRUST (w/Controls)

  19. Table 2b: EDUCATION and RACE and TRUST (w/Controls)+A54

  20. Table 2c: RACE, EDCUATION and TRUST (w/Controls)

  21. Table 3a: RACE and TRUST (Quantile .25 Regression)

  22. Table 3b: EDUCATION and RACE and TRUST (Quantile .25 Regression)+A56

  23. Table 3c: RACE, EDCUATION and TRUST (Quantile .25 Regression)

  24. Questions?

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