International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, Volume 136 , 01/04/2026

Erratum to ‘Business recovery of female-owned enterprises after urban floods: A propensity score matching analysis in the Bangkok metropolitan region’ (International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, (2026), 134, C, (106022), (S2212420926000348), 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106022)

Siriporn Darnkachatarn, Yoshio Kajitani

Abstract

The publisher regrets the omission of the Abstracts section during proof generation. The following are the corrections: Abstract Urban flooding presents escalating challenges to business continuity in rapidly urbanizing areas, such as the Bangkok Metropolitan Region (BMR) in Thailand. However, the relationship between gender and the capacity to recover from disasters in urban businesses remains largely unexplored. This study investigates gender disparities in business recovery after flood events, focusing on the recovery trajectories of female-owned businesses (FOBs) compared with those of male-owned businesses (MOBs) following the major floods in 2011, 2017, and 2022, highlighting the structural inequalities that shape post-disaster trajectories. Drawing on a structured survey of 465 enterprises in flood-prone areas of the BMR, the analysis incorporates detailed measures of firm characteristics, flood exposure, and post-disaster response characteristics. To estimate the causal impact of gender ownership on recovery time, propensity score matching (PSM) was implemented using multiple algorithms with robust covariate balance achieved across business, and disaster impact variables. Kernel-based matching yielded robust results: FOBs required 31.33 additional days to recover following the 2011 flood (p = 0.0002), declining to 11.89 days in 2017 (p = 0.0016) and 7.23 days in 2022 (p = 0.0059). Critically, the persistence of gender gaps across all three flood events, even in the less severe 2022 flood (7.23 days), provides consistent evidence that gender inequality in business recovery is systematic rather than event-specific. The study underscores the need for targeted, gender-sensitive disaster risk reduction and recovery policies, including improved financial inclusion, effective risk communication, and tailored support mechanisms to enhance resilience and promote equitable recovery outcomes in urban economic contexts. The publisher would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Document Type

Erratum

Source Type

Journal

ASJC Subject Area

Earth and Planetary Sciences : Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering GeologyEarth and Planetary Sciences : GeologySocial Sciences : Safety Research

Funding Agency

Walailak University



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Citations (Scopus)

Bibliography


Darnkachatarn, S., & Kajitani, Y. (2026). Erratum to ‘Business recovery of female-owned enterprises after urban floods: A propensity score matching analysis in the Bangkok metropolitan region’ (International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, (2026), 134, C, (106022), (S2212420926000348), 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106022). International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 136doi:10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106074

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