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Recognising Recognition in Climate Justice

Tor A. Benjaminsen, Hanne Svarstad, Iselin Shaw of Tordarroch

2022IDS Bulletin10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article argues that in order to achieve climate justice, recognition needs to be given more attention in climate research, discourse, and policies. Through the analysis of three examples, we identify formal and discursive recognition as central types of recognition in climate issues, and we show how powerful actors exercise their power in ways that cause climate injustice through formal and discursive misrecognition of poor and vulnerable groups. The three examples discussed are: climate mitigation through forest conservation (REDD), the Great Green Wall project in the Sahel, and the narrative about climate change as a contributing factor to the Syrian war.

Topics & Concepts

Climate justiceInjusticeClimate changeCommonsNarrativeEconomic JusticeVulnerability (computing)Political economy of climate changePolitical scienceSociologyEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental ethicsEcologyComputer scienceLinguisticsComputer securityLawEconomicsBiologyPhilosophySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceTransboundary Water Resource ManagementConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
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