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On February 16, 2026, 4:45:42 AM UTC, Gravatar IDP Admin:
  • Added the following fields to resource Gender - wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature in Accidental Deaths in India

      indicators with value lgd_mapping with value similar_resources with value mapping_status with value


  • Removed the following fields from resource Gender - wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature in Accidental Deaths in India

      tags similar_datasets village_no


  • Changed value of field idp_ready to True in resource Gender - wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature in Accidental Deaths in India


  • Changed value of field data_insights of resource Gender - wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature to The Gender-wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature dataset offers valuable insights into how natural disasters and environmental hazards differentially affect men and women across India. By examining gender-disaggregated data on fatalities caused by floods, lightning, landslides, heat waves, earthquakes, storms, and other natural phenomena, researchers can identify patterns of exposure, vulnerability, and resilience linked to both biological and social factors.Analysis often shows that men account for a higher share of deaths in certain natural disasters, such as floods or lightning strikes, due to greater outdoor and occupational exposure in agriculture, fishing, or construction. Conversely, women may be more vulnerable during disasters that strike residential areas or involve caregiving contexts, reflecting gendered roles and access disparities in early warning systems and evacuation processes. (previously The Gender-wise Distribution of Accidental Deaths due to Forces of Nature dataset offers valuable insights into how natural disasters and environmental hazards differentially affect men and women across India. By examining gender-disaggregated data on fatalities caused by floods, lightning, landslides, heat waves, earthquakes, storms, and other natural phenomena, researchers can identify patterns of exposure, vulnerability, and resilience linked to both biological and social factors. Analysis often shows that men account for a higher share of deaths in certain natural disasters, such as floods or lightning strikes, due to greater outdoor and occupational exposure in agriculture, fishing, or construction. Conversely, women may be more vulnerable during disasters that strike residential areas or involve caregiving contexts, reflecting gendered roles and access disparities in early warning systems and evacuation processes.) in Accidental Deaths in India