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Missing Pieces in the Discussion on Climate Change and Risk: Intersectionality and Compounded Vulnerability

H. Shellae Versey

2021Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Assessing the impact of climate change requires analyzing humans generally, as well as identifying unique and elevated risks among subgroups. Incorporating intersectional approaches (e.g., those focused on issues of poverty, place, and race) into public policy may highlight how communities and individuals with fewer resources experience compounded vulnerability to climate-related risks. An intersectional framework yields implications for research and policy in two ways, both broadly and specifically for marginalized groups. First, climate change research and policy would benefit from a more active articulation of intersectionality in its models of adaptation and vulnerability by recognizing groups at high risk for negative outcomes, including distress and displacement. Second, as psychologists document mental health outcomes associated with climate change, engaging in cross-disciplinary discussions will strengthen strategies aimed at reducing mental health disparities.

Topics & Concepts

Vulnerability (computing)IntersectionalityClimate changePovertyMental healthDistressClimate riskPolitical sciencePsychologySociologyGender studiesClinical psychologyEcologyComputer scienceLawBiologyComputer securityPsychotherapistClimate Change and Health ImpactsHealth, psychology, and well-beingOptimism, Hope, and Well-being