Gender and Climate Change
Gender discrimination hinders considerably a person’s access to the means and resources they need to face and minimise the effects of climate change on a global level.
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Gender discrimination hinders considerably a person’s access to the means and resources they need to face and minimise the effects of climate change on a global level.
The time is right to advance more robust arguments for the existence of ecosystem rights per se and the rights of future generations.
At the moment, we are far from reaching a satisfactory goal in combatting climate change, notwithstanding the years of negotiations.
Gendered consideration has led to valid critiques, and to new agendas, that have influenced the ways militaries operate.
The global north has imposed on the global south a development model based on the unconditional exploitation of nature and human beings.
Greenhouse gas emissions must be cut dramatically by about 5–8% every year if we want to achieve net-zero emissions by 2040–2050.
The world’s richest economic actors are obligated to put humanity in the conditions to live healthy lives with dignity.
A diverse collection of authors offer philosophical and interdisciplinary insights into global climate justice with a view to climate neutrality by the middle of the 21st century.
Global climate justice intersects with the problem of carbon inequality and individual responsibility for climate change.
We may now also be looking at the endgame, not just the anatomy, of a modern dictatorship.