As calls for climate action gain momentum, governments and international organisations are committing to ambitious climate targets and scaling up their climate action. In this article, we argue that to address climate change, ‘just’ climate action is required which moves away from portraying local communities as ‘victims’ and/or ‘beneficiaries’ and focuses on investing in their social and material capabilities so that they determine their futures and pathways of change. Climate action will have little meaning or will produce counterproductive results unless it is mobilised to question deep-seated inequalities and unjust framings that feed into epistemic closures and foreclose possibilities of plural pathways towards radical social change. D...
The concept of climate justice is now omnipresent in debates about the climate emergency that societ...
This chapter examines how notions of justice are contested in national climate politics and the impl...
Highlights: Youth and other vulnerable groups have limited opportunities to participate in decision...
As calls for climate action gain momentum, governments and international organisations are committin...
Despite a growing focus on the justice dimensions of climate and environmental change, this issue of...
From forest fires in Australia and California to record floods in Jakarta and the UK, it is clear th...
This issue of the IDS Bulletin brings together a range of empirically grounded studies that add to –...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This article argues that in order to achieve climate justice, recognition needs to be given more att...
Collective action on climate change is easier when the involved actors share an understanding of cli...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This article considers the role of activism and politics to restrict the supply of fossil fuels as a...
Many explorations of climate justice have focused on the international sphere, centring attention on...
Climate change is considered a moral, ethical and social issue, which makes it dierent from other de...
Purpose: This paper aims to argue that climate justice constitutes a contested discourse reflecting ...
The concept of climate justice is now omnipresent in debates about the climate emergency that societ...
This chapter examines how notions of justice are contested in national climate politics and the impl...
Highlights: Youth and other vulnerable groups have limited opportunities to participate in decision...
As calls for climate action gain momentum, governments and international organisations are committin...
Despite a growing focus on the justice dimensions of climate and environmental change, this issue of...
From forest fires in Australia and California to record floods in Jakarta and the UK, it is clear th...
This issue of the IDS Bulletin brings together a range of empirically grounded studies that add to –...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This article argues that in order to achieve climate justice, recognition needs to be given more att...
Collective action on climate change is easier when the involved actors share an understanding of cli...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This article considers the role of activism and politics to restrict the supply of fossil fuels as a...
Many explorations of climate justice have focused on the international sphere, centring attention on...
Climate change is considered a moral, ethical and social issue, which makes it dierent from other de...
Purpose: This paper aims to argue that climate justice constitutes a contested discourse reflecting ...
The concept of climate justice is now omnipresent in debates about the climate emergency that societ...
This chapter examines how notions of justice are contested in national climate politics and the impl...
Highlights: Youth and other vulnerable groups have limited opportunities to participate in decision...