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Concept information

social science subjects > geography > geographic features > hazards and disasters > differential vulnerabilities to hazards

Preferred term

differential vulnerabilities to hazards  

Definition(s)

  • The term differential vulnerabilities to hazards refers to the differences in impacts of various types of hazards on different segments of society, which are often related to class, gender, ability and disability, race, age, and geographic location. For example, the greatest users of electricity are the wealthy, but the places of extraction and power plants are not normally near them. [Source: Encyclopedia of Geography; Differential Vulnerabilities to Hazards]

Broader concept(s)

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URI

http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-RCZJDV3G-5

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