Critical climate justice. Sultana, F. The Geographical Journal, 188(1):118–124, 2022. _eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/geoj.12417
Critical climate justice [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Climate change has had unequal and uneven burdens across places whereby the planetary crisis involves a common but differentiated responsibility. The injustices of intensifying climate breakdown have laid bare the fault lines of suffering across sites and scales. A climate justice framework helps us to think about and address these inequities. Climate justice fundamentally is about paying attention to how climate change impacts people differently, unevenly, and disproportionately, as well as redressing the resultant injustices in fair and equitable ways. Critical climate justice as a praxis of solidarity and collective action benefits from greater engagement with intersectional and international feminist scholarship. Incorporating insights from feminist climate justice bolsters solidarity praxis while enriching and reframing dominant climate change discussions for more impactful and accountable action.
@article{sultana_critical_2022,
	title = {Critical climate justice},
	volume = {188},
	issn = {1475-4959},
	url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/geoj.12417},
	doi = {10.1111/geoj.12417},
	abstract = {Climate change has had unequal and uneven burdens across places whereby the planetary crisis involves a common but differentiated responsibility. The injustices of intensifying climate breakdown have laid bare the fault lines of suffering across sites and scales. A climate justice framework helps us to think about and address these inequities. Climate justice fundamentally is about paying attention to how climate change impacts people differently, unevenly, and disproportionately, as well as redressing the resultant injustices in fair and equitable ways. Critical climate justice as a praxis of solidarity and collective action benefits from greater engagement with intersectional and international feminist scholarship. Incorporating insights from feminist climate justice bolsters solidarity praxis while enriching and reframing dominant climate change discussions for more impactful and accountable action.},
	language = {en},
	number = {1},
	urldate = {2024-10-17},
	journal = {The Geographical Journal},
	author = {Sultana, Farhana},
	year = {2022},
	note = {\_eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/geoj.12417},
	keywords = {climate justice, feminism, praxis, solidarity},
	pages = {118--124},
	annote = {Annotations(Célia, 17.10.2024 15:29:01)
« In other words, climate justice fundamentally is about paying attention to how climate change impacts people differently, unevenly, and disproportionately, as well as redressing the resultant injustices in fair and equitable ways. » (Sultana, 2022, p. 118)
« Climate change is a moral problem and a justice concern, not only an economic or scientific one (Clark \& Gunaratnam, 2019; Gardiner, 2014) » (Sultana, 2022, p. 122)
« recognising and reducing intersectional harms that occur both within and across communities, and reframing debates » (Sultana, 2022, p. 122)
« Decision-makers paying attention to gender, race, class, and other axes of difference can thus avoid reductionist solutions to pursue more equitable ones without cookie-cutter approaches or “one size fits all.” » (Sultana, 2022, p. 122)
« This necessitates learning from a broad array of anti-oppression scholarships such as anti-colonial, decolonial, feminist, anti-racist, and Indigenous scholarship and action. » (Sultana, 2022, p. 122)
« Systems change needed for critical climate justice entails confronting capitalist extractivism and climate colonialism, whereby collaboration becomes vital. » (Sultana, 2022, p. 122)
},
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}

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