1st Edition
Climate Change Solutions and Environmental Migration The Injustice of Maladaptation and the Gendered 'Silent Offset' Economy
This book lifts the taboo on maladaptation, a different driver of environmentally induced migration, which shines a light on the negative consequences arising from the solutions to climate change, adaptation and mitigation policies.
Through a systematic analysis and critique of existing mitigation and adaptation polices under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and international development community, and supplemented by a small empirical study in Indonesia, this book catalogues how maladaptation is manufactured under existing climate change solutions. It posits that customary communities in general- and women in particular- are disproportionately affected by the dominant market-driven logics that underscore current climate change solutions adopted by the UNFCCC. The injustice of maladaptation is highlighted as multi-faceted and explored using political, economic, social and ecological lenses, and the concept of environmental reintegration is also explored as a possible solution to this issue. Further possibilities are then presented in the Afterword, as a combination of what the new (post-neoliberalism) conjuncture could potentially look like.
This volume will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners of climate change, environmental policy, environmental migration and displacement, development studies, I/NGOs and civil society actors and activists more broadly.
1. Conceptualising Key Terms and their Links: Maladaptation, Adaptation, Mitigation, Environmental Migration, Gender and Justice
2. Methodology: Critical, Conceptual and Empirical Issues
3. Adaptation, Development, Maladaptation: Theory and Practice
4. Mitigation and the Kyoto CDM: Manufacturing Maladaptation
5. ‘Silent Offsets’ and Feminist Perspectives on Women, Climate Change, UN-REDD+: Adapting to Women
6. Findings of Indonesian Study
7. Where are the Women?
8. Justice in the Age of the Anthropocene: Reintegration as the Fourth Dimension of Justice and the Injustice of Maladaptation.
Afterword: A Questioning Moment – A Conjunctural Crisis Manifest in the Extinction Rebellion?
Biography
Anna Ginty is an Industrial Advisor and Advocate for one of Australia’s largest trade unions in Sydney, Australia as well as a Visiting Fellow at the School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney.