Tackling climate change and gender justice – integral; not optional

Autores

  • Karen Lesley Morrow Swansea University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1166

Palavras-chave:

Gender, Andropocene, climate change, UNFCCC, governance

Resumo

This paper examines the relationship between gender justice and climate change, arguing that, to meaningfully address the issues that arise in this context, it is imperative to engage not only with matters of principle, but also with the practicalities of gender exclusion in respect of climate change itself and the praxis of global climate governance. The discussion briefly considers key gendered societal and scientific contexts that form part of the complex substrate that situates climate change in reality, academic and political debate, and which ground and shape the global climate change regime. These considerations explain why, while there is now a systemic acknowledgment of the need to act on gender issues in principle in the UNFCCC regime, the effectiveness of recently adopted strategies is not a given, and more profoundly, it behoves us to consider how their efficacy might be improved as we seek to mature global climate governance.

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Biografia do Autor

Karen Lesley Morrow, Swansea University

Morrow has been Professor of Environmental Law at Swansea University since 2007. Her research interests focus on theoretical and practical aspects of public participation in environmental law and policy and on gender and the environment. She has published extensively in these areas. She is on the Editorial Boards of the Journal of Human Rights and the Environment, the Environmental Law Review, and the University of Western Australia Law Review. She is a series editor for Critical Reflections on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar) and sits on the international advisory board for the Gender and Environment book series (Routledge). She is a member of the Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the Environment.

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2021-02-01

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Morrow, K. L. (2021) “Tackling climate change and gender justice – integral; not optional”, Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 11(1), p. 207–230. doi: 10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1166.