Climate compatible development (CCD) aims to help people improve their lives in the face of climate threats without exacerbating these threats for current and future generations. It is proving an attractive concept to both academics and practitioners. However, the social justice implications of CCD have not yet been comprehensively explored and an absence of adequate evaluation frameworks has led to multiple, legitimate cross-scalar social justice claims being marginalised. This article develops a framework to guide holistic social justice evaluation of CCD initiatives across levels and scales. Underpinning this framework is a social justice approach that embraces particularism, pluralism and procedural justice. Drawing on existing research...
Environmental justice issues have been incrementally but consistently covered within this journal in...
This article seeks to answer why North–South climate negotiations have gone on for decades without p...
Climate justice was originally conceived as a distributive question due to differentiated responsibi...
Climate compatible development (CCD) is gaining traction as a conceptual framework for mainstreaming...
Governments and donors are investing in climate compatible development (CCD) in order to reduce clim...
The shift to low carbon development implies winners and losers. This chapter explores some of the di...
Climate-compatible development (CCD) is being operationalised across the developing world through pr...
Climate compatible development (CCD) is gaining traction as a conceptual framework for mainstreaming...
Constraining global climate change to 1.5°C is commonly understood to require urgent and deep societ...
Low carbon development addresses the interface between climate change mitigation and development. Ho...
The previous two decades of scholarship devoted to the role of social justice in climate change adap...
Climate change is a justice issue for three reasons. First, its causes are driven by social inequali...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
...the greatest untapped resource at our disposal lies in the disadvantaged Australians living in ou...
Climate change presents a global problem that requires collective action. Distributing obligations i...
Environmental justice issues have been incrementally but consistently covered within this journal in...
This article seeks to answer why North–South climate negotiations have gone on for decades without p...
Climate justice was originally conceived as a distributive question due to differentiated responsibi...
Climate compatible development (CCD) is gaining traction as a conceptual framework for mainstreaming...
Governments and donors are investing in climate compatible development (CCD) in order to reduce clim...
The shift to low carbon development implies winners and losers. This chapter explores some of the di...
Climate-compatible development (CCD) is being operationalised across the developing world through pr...
Climate compatible development (CCD) is gaining traction as a conceptual framework for mainstreaming...
Constraining global climate change to 1.5°C is commonly understood to require urgent and deep societ...
Low carbon development addresses the interface between climate change mitigation and development. Ho...
The previous two decades of scholarship devoted to the role of social justice in climate change adap...
Climate change is a justice issue for three reasons. First, its causes are driven by social inequali...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
...the greatest untapped resource at our disposal lies in the disadvantaged Australians living in ou...
Climate change presents a global problem that requires collective action. Distributing obligations i...
Environmental justice issues have been incrementally but consistently covered within this journal in...
This article seeks to answer why North–South climate negotiations have gone on for decades without p...
Climate justice was originally conceived as a distributive question due to differentiated responsibi...