This paper proposes that “development justice” be taken up as an analytical concept and praxis‐driven framework for research on disasters, resilience, and climate change. The piece begins with a synopsis of the historical‐structural factors exacerbating risk in the Caribbean before reviewing the concepts of vulnerability, resilience, and development justice. Next, drawing from empirical data and via a development justice lens, we highlight how the logics, practices, and debts of colonial underdevelopment, racial capitalism, and neoliberal extraction continue to erode resilience across the region. We end by recommending that future adaptation and mitigation strategies related to disasters, catastrophes, and climate change be more attentive t...
The islands of the Caribbean are a particularly interesting geographical region to examine the dynam...
Treating the threat of climate change in the Caribbean as a case study instructive for responses glo...
Prevailing approaches to resolving the climate crisis further entrench and extend the same instituti...
The objective of this paper is to assess the impact of climate change on sustainable development in ...
Hurricanes are a fact of life in the Caribbean. This meteorological reality has shaped the islands’ ...
Natural hazards and disasters are serious contemporary threats as climate change is causing an incre...
Caribbean small island developing states (SIDS) are projected to bear the most economic costs from c...
As the climate crisis escalates the asymmetry of climatic effects on human populations is increasing...
Maria, Irma, Harvey, Katrina – these have become more than names. They represent several of the most...
Over the past five decades, Caribbean small island developing States have made significant progress ...
In this conceptual paper, we envision new development possibilities for the Anglophone Caribbean thr...
The United Nations’ invocation of ‘human security’ a generation ago promised a world increasingly go...
This paper explores the relationship between disaster risk reduction and long-term adaptive capacity...
The region is traversing a perilous moment of great uncertainty, in which unremitting structural pro...
This paper explores the relationship between disaster risk reduction and long-term adaptive capacity...
The islands of the Caribbean are a particularly interesting geographical region to examine the dynam...
Treating the threat of climate change in the Caribbean as a case study instructive for responses glo...
Prevailing approaches to resolving the climate crisis further entrench and extend the same instituti...
The objective of this paper is to assess the impact of climate change on sustainable development in ...
Hurricanes are a fact of life in the Caribbean. This meteorological reality has shaped the islands’ ...
Natural hazards and disasters are serious contemporary threats as climate change is causing an incre...
Caribbean small island developing states (SIDS) are projected to bear the most economic costs from c...
As the climate crisis escalates the asymmetry of climatic effects on human populations is increasing...
Maria, Irma, Harvey, Katrina – these have become more than names. They represent several of the most...
Over the past five decades, Caribbean small island developing States have made significant progress ...
In this conceptual paper, we envision new development possibilities for the Anglophone Caribbean thr...
The United Nations’ invocation of ‘human security’ a generation ago promised a world increasingly go...
This paper explores the relationship between disaster risk reduction and long-term adaptive capacity...
The region is traversing a perilous moment of great uncertainty, in which unremitting structural pro...
This paper explores the relationship between disaster risk reduction and long-term adaptive capacity...
The islands of the Caribbean are a particularly interesting geographical region to examine the dynam...
Treating the threat of climate change in the Caribbean as a case study instructive for responses glo...
Prevailing approaches to resolving the climate crisis further entrench and extend the same instituti...