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Three Faces of Climate Justice

Nives Dolšak, Aseem Prakash

2021Annual Review of Political Science104 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is overwhelming consensus about the science of climate change. Climate politics, however, remains volatile, driven by perceptions of injustice, which motivate policy resistance and undermine policy legitimacy. We identify three types of injustice. The first pertains to the uneven exposure to climate change impacts across countries and communities within a country. Socially, politically, and economically disadvantaged communities that have contributed the least to the climate crisis tend to be affected the most. To address climate change and its impacts, countries and subnational units have enacted a range of policies. But even carefully designed mitigation and adaptation policies distribute costs (the second justice dimension) and benefits (the third justice dimension) unevenly across sectors and communities, often reproducing existing inequalities. Climate justice requires paying careful attention to who bears the costs and who gets the benefits of both climate inaction and action.

Topics & Concepts

InjusticeClimate justiceClimate changePolitical economy of climate changeLegitimacyEconomic JusticeDisadvantagedPoliticsEnvironmental justicePolitical scienceDevelopment economicsPolitical economyPublic economicsEconomicsLawBiologyEcologySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceClimate Change Policy and EconomicsClimate Change and Geoengineering
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