Difference between revisions of "CJ-JT Biography"
From CJ-JT Wiki
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{#ask: | {{#ask: | ||
[[Category:Reports]] | [[Category:Reports]] | ||
− | |||
|?resource type | |?resource type | ||
|?resource link | |?resource link |
Revision as of 12:15, 10 November 2022
Resource type | Resource link | Author | Funded by | Date published | Translations | Key themes | Geographical focus | Summary | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 Just Transition Assessment | Reports | https://www.worldbenchmarkingalliance.org/research/2021-just-transition-assessment/ | 2021 | Just Transition | |||||
A Fair Share Phase Out | Reports | https://civilsocietyreview.org/report2021 | 2021 | ES | Fossil Fuels | The report, endorsed by over 200 civil society organisations and social movements, focusses on the now urgently needed phase out of fossil fuels, especially of fossil fuel extraction, and raises critical equity questions that arise in the context of this phaseout. To this end, the report features thirteen country profiles to demonstrate the diversity of challenges and opportunities in addressing fossil fuel production at the national as well as international level, and highlights real-world problems playing out in key countries and suggests an introductory framework for addressing “supply-side equity” issues relating to the phaseout of fossil fuel extraction, as well as a number of possible solutions including both national and international interventions. | |||
A Just Transition is a Post-extractive Transition | Reports | https://waronwant.org/sites/default/files/Post-Extractivist Transition WEB 0.pdf | Yes to Life No to Mining global network | 2019 | Extractivism | While the global majority disproportionately suffer the impacts of the climate crisis and the extractivist model, the Global North’s legacy of colonialism, the excess of the world’s wealthiest, and the power of large corporations are responsible for these interrelated crises.
The climate change mitigation commitments thus far made by countries in the Global North are wholly insufficient; not only in terms of emissions reductions, but in their failure to address the root causes of the crisis – systemic and intersecting inequalities and injustices. This failure to take inequality and injustice seriously can be seen in even the most ambitious models of climate mitigation. This report sets out to explore the social and ecological implications of those models. | |||
A People's Green New Deal (Book) | Reports | https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/48775 | Pluto Books (publisher) | 2021 | Environmental Public Policy | Max Ajl provides an overview of the various mainstream Green New Deals. Critically engaging with their proponents, ideological underpinnings and limitations, he goes on to sketch out a radical alternative: a 'People's Green New Deal' committed to degrowth, anti-imperialism and agro-ecology. | |||
A People-Centred Approach To Managing Africa’s Forests As A Carbon Sink | Reports | https://climatereality.co.za/report-people-centred-approach-africas-forests-carbon-sinks/ | The Climate Reality Project | 2021 | People centered approach to managing carbon sinks | The research report reviews the state of Africa’s forests and their carbon stocks, highlights the drivers of deforestation and forest degradation in Africa, and recommends practices and policies to manage forest ecosystems to maximise their capacity as carbon sinks. | |||
A People’s Orientation To A Regenerative Economy | Reports | https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oeuKrByDhh54IVmJqy2z0wX3yC KPGjU/view | 2020 | ES | Regenerative economy | The intersecting crises of income and wealth inequality and climate change, driven by systemic white supremacy and gender inequality, has exposed the frailty of the U.S. economy and democracy. This document was prepared during the COVID-19 pandemic which exacerbated these existing crises and underlying conditions. | |||
Accommodating Migration in Climate Change Adaptation - A GBM Delta Bangladesh Perspective | Reports | https://www.forum-asia.org/uploads/wp/2019/07/Accommodating-Migration-in-Climate-Change-Adaptation.pdf | DFID (UK) and ICRD (Canada) | 2018 | Migration | This book is part of a five-year multi-country inter-disciplinary research project entitled DEltas, vulnerabilities and Climate Change: Migration and Adaptation (DEECMA) under the research programme Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA) | |||
Avoiding The Climate Poverty Spiral: Social Protection to Avoid Climate-induced Loss and Damage | Reports | https://actionaid.org/sites/default/files/publications/Avoiding the climate poverty spiral 0.pdf | Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung with funds of the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development of the Federal Republic of Germany | 2021 | Social Protection, Poverty | This briefing outlines how gender-responsive systems of social protection and the various tools and policies that they include can help to deliver a human-rights based approach to sustainable development, while minimising and addressing climate-induced loss and damage. | |||
Carbon Pricing: A Critical Perspective of Community Resistance | Reports | https://drive.google.com/file/d/18bfpaO4f8l4e9CmJPRL99FstaYqKthxV/view | 2017 | Carbon pricing | The publication provides a global historical critique of carbon trading, offsets, REDD+ and carbon taxes. This publication supports communities and organizations articulate crucial points to resist carbon pricing and climate change. | ||||
Care & Climate: understanding the policy intersections | Reports | http://feministgreennewdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/FemGND-IssueBrief-Draft7-Apr15.pdf | Wallace Global Fund, Oxfam America | 2021 | Just Transition | This Issue Brief describes why in order to ensure that climate change solutions do not perpetuate injustice, policy design must be attentive to the connections between climate change and care work. Investment in high-quality jobs in the care sectors of our economy — childcare, residential care, and home healthcare, among others — is necessary for equitable access to the job opportunities in the clean energy sector, as a source of employment for those transitioning from the fossil fuel sectors, as green jobs themselves, and as a means to mitigate the inequities occurring as climate disasters hurt communities across the United States. | |||
Chasing Carbon Unicorns: The Deception Of Carbon Markets And “Net Zero” | Reports | https://www.foei.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Friends-of-the-earth-international-carbon-unicorns-english.pdf | 2021 | PT | Carbon markets | This report unpacks the science behind “net zero” claims and how they are used to obscure climate inaction. It explores the new strategies to expand carbon offset markets, linked with new “net zero” demand for offsets. It also explains the roles played by various actors involved in the effort to “make offsetting great again”. These include less obvious players such as a few large mainstream conservation organisations, as well as the more obvious ones: the banks, the finance industry, and corporate interests behind maintaining the status quo of fossil fuel production and consumption. | |||
Climage Change: Focus on Girls and Young Women | Reports | https://plan-international.org/publications/climate-change-focus-girls-and-young-women | 2019 | Gender Equality | The paper provides an introduction to what climate change is and how it affects our work. It connects children’s rights and specifically girls’ rights to national level climate policies and their implications. It gives an in-depth exploration of 3 areas that are often excluded from global and national climate strategies and where Plan International can provide added value: education, the just transition to a green economy, and girls' voice and leadership. | ||||
Climate Justice in Southern Africa | Reports | https://knowledgehub.southernafricatrust.org/site/assets/files/2147/climate-justice-in-southern-africa.pdf | 2021 | Climate Change, Climate Justice | This paper draws on substantial evidence showing the region’s exposure to extreme climate-related events such as floods, droughts and cyclones as well as unprecedented rainfall and temperature variations. Case studies show that extreme weather events are impacting communities economically and socially due to environmental losses, damage to infrastructure and erosion of livelihoods with consequences for human rights and social justice in the region | ||||
Climate Justice: Navigating the Discourse | Reports | https://www.forum-asia.org/uploads/wp/2020/09/Forum-Asia-Working-Paper-Series-No.-8 Final-01082020.pdf | 2020 | Defining climate justice | This paper places attention on the role of environmental human rights defenders (EHRDs) and indigenous peoples who have been playing a crucial role in opposing development projects threatening the environment, while also being exposed to ill-informed adaptation and mitigation measures; on national human rights institutions which hold immense potential in linking the human rights and climate change agendas; and on the youth who propel the movement forward in Thailand, combining creativity and knowledge. | ||||
Climate migrants pushed to the brink | Reports | https://actionaid.org/sites/default/files/publications/ActionAid CANSA Policy brief Final - SAMAC - May2020.pdf | European Union | 2020 | Migration | The study finds that people’s livelihoods in South Asia are being devastated by intense flooding, chronic drought, sea-level rise and changing weather patterns. As local coping mechanisms fail, people are forced to migrate to survive and make an alternative living to feed their families. Governments are unprepared to deal with the issue as they have not yet recognised how climate impacts are affecting internal migration trends. As a result, they have not developed appropriate policies to avert, minimise and address the issue. | |||
Gendered and racial impacts of the fossil fuel industry in North America and complicit financial institutions | Reports | https://e01c23b4-9f2e-4830-9320-a86de06b013e.filesusr.com/ugd/d99d2e 918b1e133b2548549b686e4b6eac4cc3.pdf | 2021 | Impacts and intersectionality | The report addresses the gender and race-specific health and safety impacts as well as human and Indigenous rights issues of fossil fuel extraction and infrastructure in the United States and selected parts of Canada. The report also exposes the role that financial institutions, including banks, asset managers, and insurance companies, play in preserving and perpetuating negative gender and racial impacts due to the financing, insuring, and investing in fossil fuel companies. Based on analysis and evidence that links fossil fuel activity to women’s health, safety, and rights, the report advocates for financial institutions to divest from and cease insuring fossil fuel companies. | ||||
Grassroots Climate Justice Movements Advancing Systemic and Policy Change | Reports | https://climasolutions.org/resource/grassroots-change/ | 2021 | Systemic change, Policy change, Climate grants, Grassroots solutions, Philathrophy | The CLIMA Fund is pleased to share two briefs on grassroots movements advancing systemic and policy change as they address the root causes of the climate crisis and respond to contemporary socio-political challenges. These two briefs capture just a few examples of how grassroots groups 1) change policy and 2) create systemic change. The briefs demonstrate that grassroots movements are critical for advancing climate action commensurate with the scenarios in the recent IPCC reports. The briefs provide further evidence that grassroots-led change creates results that are long-lasting, effective at cooling the planet, and integral to upholding social justice. | ||||
Guidelines for a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all | Reports | https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed dialogue/---actrav/documents/publication/wcms 647648.pdf | 2018 | Just Transition | These guidelines serve as a policy framework and a practical tool to help countries manage the transition to low-carbon economies. | ||||
Hoodwinked in the hot house - Resist false solutions to climate change | Reports | https://climatefalsesolutions.org/ | 2021 | ES, PT | Carbon pricing, Nature-based solutions, Energy solutions, Geoengineering, Climate Justice | We see the pressing need to address the root causes of environmental and climate injustices by confronting four centuries of colonial-imperialism, ongoing patriarchal and white supremacist oppression, and today’s extreme neoliberal, globalized, industrial capitalist expansion. Hoodwinked demonstrates how climate change false solutions perpetuate, expand and reinforce these structures. | |||
Incorporating Gender Equality in Environment and Climate | Reports | https://www.gaggashare.net/index.php/s/PTAW8R9bQSrnack | 2020 | Gender Equality | This paper highlights the key findings from a mapping and roundtable dialogues, relevant policies, mechanisms, tools and funding channels of five government donors, all frontrunners in their support of gender equality and environmental and climate action in development cooperation. It also offers some recommendations and resources for action by government donors to more effectively integrate and further strengthen gender equality in environmental and climate policies. | ||||
Indigenous Women & Climate Change | Reports | https://www.iwgia.org/images/publications/new-publications/Indigenous Women and Climate Change IWGIA.pdf | 2019 | ES | Indigenous peoples, gender equality | This book seeks to go beyond simple public policy aspirations in order to reconsider the impacts of climate change on women on the basis of their actions of resistance, their daily practices, the links between these practices and the need to re-think their contributions from the centres of power. | |||
Just Transition Concepts and Relevance for Climate Action | Reports | https://www.csis.org/analysis/just-transition-concepts-and-relevance-climate-action | Climate Investment Funds | 2020 | Just Transition | This paper seeks to explain the just transitions concept, including its origins and relevance. We offer a preliminary framework to describe the range of definitions among stakeholders and their underlying perspectives. We also identify several areas that would benefit from additional research, including more robust case studies and better tools and planning strategies for policymakers. | |||
Just Transitions: a comparative perspective | Reports | https://www.gov.scot/publications/transitions-comparative-perspective/ | 2020 | Just Transition | This report provides a comparison of just transitions in five countries: the US, Canada, Germany, Norway and Peru | ||||
Migration as Adaptation: exploring mobility as an adaptation to climate change | Reports | https://climatemigration.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/migration adaptation climate.pdf | Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, The Funding Network, The Edith Maud Ellis 1985 Charitable Trust, The Mingulay Prewell Trust | 2012 | Migration | The report explores the possibility of migrating as a way of coping with climate change impacts, but also examines some of the risks involved in such strategies. Rather than viewing migration as a last resort some researchers have proposed the idea that migration could become a new way for people to diversify agricultural livelihoods in response to climate change impacts. Such migration strategies give an individual the chance to diversify their income, allows the spreading of risk for the household, and the sending of money back to family members, which would, in turn, increase resilience back home. However, migration is not a silver bullet when it comes to adaptation. Migrating to pursue alternative livelihoods does not always lead to a more stable life. There are cases where people who move – especially into poor housing in cities – could be exposed to new and different risks. | |||
Neo-Colonial Economies And Ecologies, Smallholder Farmers And Multiple Shocks: The Case Of Cyclones Idai And Kenneth In Mozambique And Zimbabwe | Reports | https://www.acbio.org.za/sites/default/files/neo-colonial-economies-ecologies-smallholder-farmers-and-multiple-shocks.pdf | 2020 | Climate Change, Agriculture, Extractivism, Food Insecurity | This paper critically examines the political and economic drivers of ecological degradation under the guise of development loans and aid, through rapacious natural resource extraction and social and cultural displacement – the backdrop to tropical cyclones Idai and Kenneth, which made history by respectively striking central and northern Mozambique only six weeks apart from each other in 2019 and also severely impacted parts of Zimbabwe and Malawi | ||||
Perspectives On A Global Green New Deal | Reports | https://global-gnd.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/GGND-Booklet-DIGITAL-withlink-single.pdf | The Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development of the Federal Republic of Germany. | 2021 | Climate Justice, Justice-centered Transition, Health, Housing and Social Protection, Trade and Investment, Conservation, Food and Energy - Land, Water, Ice and Oceans, Migration Foreign Policy, Debt, Reparations and Accountability | Promises of a ‘Green New Deal’ have captured the imagination of climate activists, scholars and policymakers across Europe and North America. Unless grounded in principles of global justice, the promise of green jobs and infrastructure in the Global North could simply mean a continuation of colonial patterns of inequality and exploitation around the world. What would it mean for the Green New Deal to be globally fair? Harpreet Kaur Paul and Dalia Gebrial bring together climate justice insights experts from around the world, to explore the key themes that will define the future of any equitable and just global green new deal | |||
Pluriverse: a Post-Development Dictionary | Reports | https://www.ehu.eus/documents/6902252/12061123/Ashish+Kothari+et+al-Pluriverse+A+Post-Development+Dictionary-2019.pdf/c9f05ea0-d2e7-8874-d91c-09d11a4578a2 | 2019 | Development and its crises, Reforming and universalizing solutions, People's Transformative Initiatives | This book contains over 100 essays on transformative initiatives and alternatives to the currently dominant processes of globalized development, including its structural roots in modernity, capitalism, state domination, and masculinist values. It offers critical essays on mainstream solutions that ‘greenwash’ development, and presents radically different worldviews and practices from around the world that point to an ecologically wise and socially just world. | ||||
Racism and Climate (In)Justice - How Racism and Colonialism Shape the Climate Industry and Climate Action | Reports | https://us.boell.org/en/2021/03/19/racism-and-climate-injustice-0 | Heinrich Böll Stiftung | 2021 | Racial Justice, Climate Justice | How have racism and colonialism contributed to creating the climate crisis; how have they shaped the response to it; and why is the crisis hitting Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPoC) the hardest? The framing paper addresses these questions through a broad framing of the complex historical and empirical realities that show that colonialism and racism have played an integral part in shaping, and continue to shape, climate change and climate policy to this day. | |||
Restorative Climate Justice | Reports | https://www.earth-in-common.org/restorativeclimatejustice | 2021 | Restorative climate justice | Earth in Common proposes a new term: ‘restorative climate justice’. The concept it describes brings together elements of restorative justice, climate justice, agroecology and food sovereignty. While it is arguably already implicit in many effective projects, it has not, to our knowledge, ever been made explicit. We believe the concept could contribute to the field of international aid and development, boosting the fight against climate change, enhancing climate resilience and, not least, greatly increasing the status and wellbeing of indigenous peoples. | ||||
Restoring Landscapes In India For Climate And Communities: Key Findings From Madhya Pradesh’s Sidhi District | Reports | 2020 | Landscape restoration, Climate change | Restoring landscapes can bring economic, environmental, and social prosperity to people and the planet. In the Sidhi District of India’s Madhya Pradesh state, the opportunity is massive. By adapting the popular Restoration Opportunities Assessment Methodology (ROAM) to measure ecosystem services, livelihood benefits, land tenure, gender, and social inclusion and by mapping the social landscape, we uncovered that diverse potential. | |||||
Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) in National Adaptation Plan (NAP) Processes - exploring a pathway for realizing rights and resilience to climate change | Reports | https://napglobalnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/napgn-en-2021-srhr-in-nap-processes.pdf | Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation | 2021 | Gender equality, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights | This report explores the extent to which NAP processes recognize the linkages between climate change adaptation and the realization of SRHR, including maternal and newborn health, voluntary modern contraception, and gender-based violence. It draws on analysis of 19 NAP documents submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change by low- and medium- income countries, a sample of sector-specific NAPs for the health sector, and a selection of funding proposals for adaptation planning support from the Green Climate Fund. | |||
Soil to Sky: Climate Solutions that Work | Reports | https://climasolutions.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Soil-to-Sky-1.pdf | Wallace Global Fund | 2018 | Movement building, Gender Equity, Agroecology, Community Renewables, Direct resistance to extractive industries, Indigenous Peoples as Frontline Defenders | This report aggregates research on the use of grassroots solutions in addressing climate change. It uplifts the solutions that have too often been excluded from climate philanthropy, yet have great potential for scaled impact on the most urgent crisis of our time It powerfully affirms that funders who have traditionally invested in top-down strategies to the climate crisis can also make lasting, effective, and scalable investments in grassroots-driven responses. | |||
State Of Civil Society Report 2021 | Reports | https://civicus.org/state-of-civil-society-report-2021/ | 2021 | ES, FR, PT, AR | Racial Justice, Challenging exclusion and claiming Rights, Economic and Environmental Justice, Democracy under the Pandemic, Civil society in the International Arena | Each year, CIVICUS publishes the State of Civil Society Report to analyse how contemporary events and trends are impacting on civil society and how civil society is responding to the major issues and problems of the day. This is the 10th edition of our report, focusing on civil society action and developments affecting civil society in 2020, looking back over 10 years of civil society activity and highlighting key actions for action in civil society in 2021 and beyond. | |||
Strong Roots: Understanding the Importance of Myanmar’s Indigenous Women as Leaders in Developing Climate Change Solutions | Reports | https://www.iwgia.org/en/resources/publications/3999-iwgia-strong-roots.html | 2020 | Indigenous peoples, Gender equality | This book contains a series of essays predominantly written by Indigenous women from Myanmar. On one hand, their daily activities in forests mean they hold the knowledge of how to grow seeds and plants, as well as care for native species and protect biodiversity. These roles create an important relationship between Indigenous women and the forests which surround their homes. On the other hand, Indigenous women are amongst the economically poorest populations in the world and rely on renewable natural resources. As such, they are at high risk of being impacted by climate changes and are vulnerable to (or already affected by) climatic shifts, with consequences for their health, food, housing, work life and personal security. As rural women tend to have less financial, physical and human resources than men, they have fewer options to respond to these changes. | ||||
The Big Con: How Big Polluters are advancing a “net zero” climate agenda to delay, deceive, and deny | Reports | https://www.corporateaccountability.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/The-Big-Con EN.pdf | 2021 | False solutions, Carbon colonialism | This report presents clear evidence that “net zero” climate plans are simply the latest attempt by polluting industries... to escape responsibility to act to address climate change. | ||||
The Case for Climate Justice: illustrated booklet | Reports | https://www.globaljustice.org.uk/sites/default/files/files/resources/climatejustice webspreads.pdf | 2020 | Carbon colonialism and racism, Corporate Power, Just Transition, Systems Change | Climate breakdown isn’t just an ecological crisis, serious though that is. It’s a crisis which exacerbates much of the inequality and injustice of the economic system it’s rooted in. But like climate change, economic systems are man-made. This booklet argues that by building a climate justice movement that challenges the powerful, we can make a world where the needs of people and the planet matter more than corporate profits. | ||||
The Climate Crisis - Climate Change Impacts, Trends and Vulnerabilities of Children in Sub Saharan Africa | Reports | https://www.unicef.org/esa/media/7061/file/UNICEF-The-Climate-Crisis-2020.pdf | 2020 | Children, Climate change impacts, Intersectionality | Children are the least responsible for climate change. However, they will bear the greatest burden of its impact. At the time of writing, nearly 160 million children live in high drought-severity zones and 500 million live in extremely high flood occurrence zones. In addition to this, it is estimated that by 2040 almost 600 million children will be living in areas of extremely high water supply stress conditions. The aim of this report is to outline the current and projected impacts of climate change. It also explores the related climate hazards, risks and vulnerabilities for children in sub-Saharan Africa. | ||||
The Contribution of Social Dialogue to the 2030 Agenda - Promoting a Just Transition towards sustainable economies and societies for all | Reports | https://www.ituc-csi.org/social-dialogue-for-sdgs-promoting-just-transition?lang=en | 2019 | Just Transition, Unions | What is Just Transition and how is it achievable? This research paper shows through existing good practices that Just Transition is possible when unions sit around the table in social dialogue with employers and governments. | ||||
The Elites Don't Care: People on the Front Line of Coal, COVID and the Climate Crisis | Reports | https://www.groundwork.org.za/reports/gW Report 2020 web.pdf | 2020 | Fossil Fuels, Covid, Climate change Impacts, Intersectionality | This State of Environmental Justice 2020 Report follows on "from Down to Zero", the groundWork 2019 report on the politics of an (un)just transition. It looks at the impacts of the pandemic from global to local level, in particular reporting on the research of community activists in each of South Africa’s active coal fields. It also examines government’s actual climate response, as it bets on a fossil gas bonanza to deliver economic redemption and still punts the so called clean coal, even as Eskom abandons that myth. | ||||
The Indigenous World 2021 | Reports | https://www.iwgia.org/en/resources/indigenous-world | 2021 | ES | Indigenous rights | The Indigenous World 2021 is the unique result of a collaborative effort between Indigenous and non-indigenous activists and scholars who voluntarily document and report on the situation of Indigenous Peoples’ rights. We thank them and celebrate the bonds and sense of community that result from the close cooperation needed to make this one-of-a kind documentation tool available. | |||
The Link Between Climate Change And Sexual And Reproductive Health And Rights | Reports | https://womendeliver.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Climate-Change-Report.pdf | 2021 | Gender equality | This report is designed to be used by decision-makers and climate change, humanitarian, and gender equality advocates to better understand the linkages between sectors and align efforts to generate effective policies and programs. | ||||
The Politics of Knowledge: Understanding the Evidence for Agroecology, Regenerative Approaches, and Indigenous Foodways | Reports | https://futureoffood.org/insights/the-politics-of-knowledge-compendium/ | 2021 | Key messages available in French and Spanish on the same webpage | Agroecology, Indigenous Knowledge | The compendium tackles the dominant questions about evidence that are holding back food systems transformation. Authors unpack the narratives and legacies behind these questions and explore the many ways funders, researchers, and policymakers can take transformative action. Alongside recommendations for action, authors focus on unpacking five dominant questions: can these approaches feed the world? be scaled? provide meaningful livelihoods? solve the climate, biodiversity, and soils crises? accelerate transformation? | |||
The Principles of Agroecology - towards Just, Resilient and Sustainable Systems | Reports | https://www.cidse.org/2018/04/03/the-principles-of-agroecology/ | 2018 | On the same page, the report is availble in the following languages: ES - FR - GE - IT - NL - PT | Agroecology | This paper is an attempt to clarify what agroecology means, what it looks like and show that, when taken as a whole, agroecology and its various principles can lead to tremendous positive effects in terms of human rights and the right to food. | |||
Towards Reparative Climate Justice: from Crises to Liberations | Reports | https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5e2191f00f868d778b89ff85/6071e27f9e138da86620f637 CW GND-Reparations-Harpreet.pdf | 2021 | Green New Deal | In our latest report, Harpreet Kaur Paul makes the case for climate reparations and explains how we can redistribute the responsibility of climate financing. | ||||
Women Warming Up! - Building Resilient, Grassroots Feminist Movements for Climate Justice in Asia-Pacific | Reports | https://apwld.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/CJ-FPAR-regionalreport.pdf | Norad, Sida | 2015 | Gender equality | This is the regional report based on the results of our Climate Justice feminist participatory action research (FPAR) programme. This programme looked at the impacts of climate change on women’s lives in 8 countries in Asia and the Pacific: Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. | |||
Youth Climate Advocacy | Reports | https://knowledgehub.southernafricatrust.org/site/assets/files/2017/youth and climate change special-report-benkenstein-et-al-002.pdf | 2020 | Young people/Community organising/activism |
- This page was last edited on 10 November 2022, at 12:15.
- Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 or later unless otherwise noted.