Climate Justice in the Majority World: Vulnerability, Resistance, and Diverse Knowledges
Edited book, 2023
The impacts of climate change are disproportionately affecting individuals, communities, and countries in the Majority World who historically have contributed little to rising global temperatures. The 12 chapters focus on a range of cross-cutting themes, demonstrating both individual and collective experiences of climate change and struggles for achieving climate justice from the Majority World. This includes activism, resistance, and social movement organizing in India and Brazil; lived experiences and understandings of frontline communities in Bangladesh and South Africa; consequences of and responses to disasters in Mozambique and Puerto Rico; and contested accounts, narratives, and futures in the Maldives and Pakistan, among other topics.
By adopting a decolonial lens, this book provides rich empirical content, insightful comparisons, and novel conceptual interventions. It foregrounds climate justice from an intersectional perspective and contributes to the ongoing efforts by scholars and activists to address epistemic injustice in climate change research, policy, and practice. It will appeal to undergraduate and graduate-level students, academics, activists, policymakers, and members of the public concerned with the impacts and inequalities of climate change in the Majority World.
Decolonial
climate change
climate justice
Epistemic Justice
Majority World
Editor
Neil J.W. Crawford
University of Leeds
Kavya Michael
Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis
Michael Mikulewicz
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Subject Categories
Ethics
Social and Economic Geography
Social Sciences Interdisciplinary
Sociology
Political Science
Driving Forces
Sustainable development
DOI
10.4324/9781003214021
ISBN
9781032101712
Publisher
Routledge