Equity, Environmental Justice, and Urban Climate Change (2024)

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Equity, Environmental Justice, and Urban Climate Change Coordinating Lead Authors Lead Authors Contributing Authors

Anika N Haque

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Climate change, equity and the Sustainable Development Goals: an urban perspective

Marcela Tovar Restrepo, Darryn McEvoy, Diana Reckien, Shuaib Lwasa

AbStrACt Climate change is acknowledged as the largest threat to our societies in the coming decades, potentially affecting large and diverse groups of urban residents in this century of urbanization. As urban areas house highly diverse people with differing vulnerabilities, intensifying climate change is likely to shift the focus of discussions from a general urban perspective to who in cities will be affected by climate change, and how. This brings the urban equity question to the forefront. Here we assess how climate change events may amplify urban inequity. We find that heatwaves, but also flooding, landslides, and even mitigation and adaptation measures, affect specific population groups more than others. As underlying sensitivity factors we consistently identify socioeconomic status and gender. We synthesize the findings with regard to equity types – meaning outcome-based, process-oriented and context-related equity – and suggest solutions for avoiding increased equity and justice concerns as a result of climate change impacts, adaptation and mitigation.

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Climate Action Planning: An Intersectional Approach to The Urban Equity Dilemma

Introduction Findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the leading international scientific institution on climate change research, unequivocally demonstrate that, without intervention, climate change will have devastating impacts on human communities. Those who face the intersections of racism, classism and sexism have long born the brunt of environmental hazards, both globally and in the United States (Bullard 2005; Chavis and Lee 1987). This is no different when it comes to climate change which, under existing social conditions, puts the global poor, people of color, and women at the greatest risk (Nagel 2012; Douglas et al. 2012; Shearer 2011) and has been projected to be “globally stratifying, because its worst impacts will fall disproportionately on those countries, livelihood systems and ‘at risk’ populations that are already poor”(Devereux and Edwards 2004: 28). Importantly, such global stratification should not be interpreted as only impacting region...

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ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

New York City Panel on Climate Change 2019 Report Chapter 6: Community-Based Assessments of Adaptation and Equity

2019 •

Sheila Foster, Angela Tovar

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Nature Climate Change

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Stacy VanDeveer

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Intersectional climate justice: A conceptual pathway for bridging adaptation planning, transformative action, and social equity

Intersectional climate justice: A conceptual pathway for bridging adaptation planning, transformative action, and social equity

2021 •

Ana Terra Amorim-Maia

Local governments around the world are formulating different ways to address climate change. However, the compounding and overlapping vulnerabilities of historically marginalized residents are commonly tackled in a fragmented manner by conventional adaptation approaches, even when justice is presented as an overarching goal of these plans. In response, we propose an intersectional pivot in climate adaptation research and practice to analyze the interconnected forms of social-environmental injustices that drive vulnerabilities in cities, paving the way for more concrete and integrated strategies of just urban adaptation and transformation. This paper brings together narrative and analytical review methodologies to inform a new conceptual framework that highlights the need to (1) tackle underlying reinforcers of racial and gender in- equalities; (2) redress drivers of differential vulnerabilities; (3) take politics and ethics of care seriously; (4) adopt place-based and place-making approaches; and (5) promote cross-identity forms of activism and community resilience building. We illustrate the framework with exam- ples of ongoing projects in Barcelona, Spain, which is an early adopter of intersectional thinking and justice-driven principles in climate action. Although many initiatives are in a pilot phase and do not all exclusively focus on climate adaptation, experiences from Barcelona do provide illustrative directionality for innovative and integrated approaches that can address multiple and intersecting social-environmental inequities.

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Urban Planning

The Equity Dimension of Climate Change: Perspectives From the Global North and South

2021 •

Mark Seasons

The articles in this thematic issue represent a variety of perspectives on the challenges for equity that are attributable to climate change. Contributions explore an emerging and important issue for communities in the Global North and Global South: the implications for urban social equity associated with the impacts caused by climate change. While much is known about the technical, policy, and financial tools and strategies that can be applied to mitigate or adapt to climate change in communities, we are only now thinking about who is affected by climate change, and how. Is it too little, too late? Or better now than never? The articles in this thematic issue demonstrate that the local impacts of climate change are experienced differently by socio-economic groups in communities. This is especially the case for the disadvantaged and marginalized—i.e., the poor, the very young, the aged, the disabled, and women. Ideally, climate action planning interventions should enhance quality of...

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Regional Environmental Change

Translating and embedding equity-thinking into climate adaptation: an analysis of US cities

Clare Cannon

Cities increasingly recognize the importance of furthering social equity in their climate adaptation planning. Such efforts are often in response to grassroots mobilizations, yet it is not clear to what extent they translate into urban coalitions, policy designs, and implementation efforts within city governments. In this paper, we respond to this knowledge gap by assessing how equity-thinking is translated into cities’ adaptation decision-making and governance arrangements, especially in ways that can lead to more inclusive and just climate adaptation outcomes for historically marginalized communities. We analyze adaptation plans for the 25 largest US cities using deductive and inductive coding strategies to uncover the ideas, rhetoric, and processes that guide equitable plans. We then map these outcomes of equity-thinking across procedural, distributive, and recognitional categories. Our analysis lends support to the operation of two social constructivist mechanisms of equity-thin...

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Equity Impacts of Urban Land Use Planning for Climate Adaptation: Critical Perspectives from the Global North and South

Daniel Gallagher, Isabelle Anguelovski

A growing number of cities are preparing for climate change impacts by developing adaptation plans. However, little is known about how these plans and their implementation affect the vulnerability of the urban poor. We critically assess initiatives in eight cities worldwide and find that land use planning for climate adaptation can exacerbate socio-spatial inequalities across diverse developmental and environmental conditions. We argue that urban adaptation injustices fall into two categories: acts of commission, when interventions negatively affect or displace poor communities, and acts of omission, when they protect and prioritize elite groups at the expense of the urban poor.

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Climate Policy

Inclusive approaches to urban climate adaptation planning and implementation in the Global South

2015 •

Isabelle Anguelovski

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Equity, Environmental Justice, and Urban Climate Change (2024)

FAQs

What does environmental justice and equity mean? ›

If environmental equity is a basic human right, environmental justice is the act of protecting that right. Environmental justice involves the actions and activism necessary to highlight inequities and level the playing field.

What is the equity issue of climate change? ›

Climate equity is the goal of recognizing and addressing the unequal burdens made worse by climate change, while ensuring that all people share the benefits of climate protection efforts.

What is the relationship between climate change and environmental justice? ›

Environmental injustice, including the proliferation of climate change, systematically impacts communities of color and low-income communities in the U.S. and around the world.

What is climate justice and equity? ›

Climate equity works to balance both access to key resources, while protecting vulnerable communities and populations from environmental hazards, regardless of race, income, or other characteristics. Policies aimed to improve the environment may distribute costs and benefits unevenly across different populations.

What is an example of equity in the environment? ›

For example, everyone would have the ability to evacuate, have access to sandbagging materials, and even more broadly everyone would have the right to live somewhere that wasn't vulnerable to flooding based on harmful laws and policies.

What is the principle of equity and climate justice? ›

Climate justice links human rights and development to achieve a human-centred approach, safeguarding the rights of the most vulnerable people and sharing the burdens and benefits of climate change and its impacts equitably and fairly.

What is the biggest issue causing climate change? ›

Burning fossil fuels changes the climate more than any other human activity. Carbon dioxide: Human activities currently release over 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year.

What is the issue of environment and equity? ›

Environmental equity refers to the idea that certain minority and lower income groups are disproportionately affected by pollution. It explores the relationship between sociodemographic factors and the decision-making process regarding the cleanup of polluted sites.

What are 5 problems caused by climate change? ›

More frequent and intense drought, storms, heat waves, rising sea levels, melting glaciers and warming oceans can directly harm animals, destroy the places they live, and wreak havoc on people's livelihoods and communities. As climate change worsens, dangerous weather events are becoming more frequent or severe.

What are two environmental issues that could lead to environmental justice? ›

Air and water pollution are major environmental justice issues. Because many lower-income communities or communities with a primary minority population are located near industrial plants or waste disposal sites, air and water quality can suffer if not properly monitored.

What are some examples of environmental justice? ›

What indicators of environmental justice can I learn about here?
  • Health inequities in childhood asthma.
  • Health inequities in childhood lead exposure.
  • Childhood lead exposure.
  • Birth outcomes.
  • Poverty and income.

Who is most affected by climate justice? ›

The environmental justice movement—championed primarily by Black people, Latines, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, and Indigenous People—was born of a statistical fact: Those who live, work, and play in America's most polluted environments are commonly people of color and those living in poverty.

What is equity in environmental justice? ›

In the context of environmental justice and planning, equitable development improves public involvement; supports collaborative problem solving; and makes a visible difference in communities that are underserved, under-resourced, and overburdened.

How does climate change relate to equity? ›

Equity means acknowledging disproportionate impacts from climate change and how those are rooted in the historic and systemic oppression of Black, Indigenous and Poor communities.

What is the concept of equity, justice, and fairness in context of climate change? ›

Whereas the principle of equity is used in the context of Annex 1 countries versus non-Annex 1 countries, the principle of justice (or more accurately, injustice) is about the adverse impacts of climate change on poor people and countries whereas the problem has been created by the emissions of richer people and ...

What is the meaning of justice and equity? ›

The term “equity” refers to fairness and justice and is distinguished from equality: Whereas equality means providing the same to all, equity means recognizing that we do not all start from the same place and must acknowledge and make adjustments to imbalances.

What is the principle of environmental justice and equity? ›

Following the core definition from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), environmental justice seeks the equitable treatment and involvement of people of all races, cultures, incomes, and educational levels in the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental programs, laws, rules, and policies.

What is the meaning of environmental justice? ›

Environmental Justice - The right to a safe, healthy, productive, and sustainable environment for all, where "environment" is considered in its totality to include the ecological (biological), physical (natural and built), social, political, aesthetic, and economic environments.

What is an equitable environment? ›

In an equitable and inclusive classroom every student has equal access to learning, is treated equitably by the learning community, and feels valued and supported by their instructor and peers.

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