The pathology of inequality: Gender and ebola in West Africa

Author(s)
Diggins, J.
Date published
01 Feb 2015
Publisher
IDS Practice Paper in Brief
Type
Articles
Keywords
Assessment & Analysis, Epidemics & pandemics, Gender

The international response to Ebola has been decried for being ‘too slow, too little, too late’. As well as racing to respond, we need to consider what has happened over the past decades to leave exposed fault lines that enabled Ebola to move so rapidly across boundaries of people’s bodies, villages, towns and countries.

Gender is important to these fault lines in two related spheres. Women and men are differentially affected by Ebola, with women in the region taking on particular roles and responsibilities as they care for the ill and bury the dead, and as they navigate ever-diminishing livelihood options and increasingly limited health resources available to pregnant women. Furthermore, structural preconditions in ‘development’ itself have deepened these gendered fault lines.