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Qu'est-ce que le Compendium?
Le Compendium est une cartographie répertoriant les organisations des pays du Sud qui travaillent sur la justice climatique et la transition juste. Cette cartographie est consultable géographiquement par pays, régions, et thèmes/problèmes clés. C'est un outil open source conçu pour devenir plus complet au fil du temps.
La cartographie a été réalisée par le Justice climatique - Collaboration des Donateurs pour une Transition Juste (CJ-JT en anglais), car de nombreuses études ont montré que le financement philanthropique n'atteignait pas les personnes les plus touchées par l'injustice, en particulier celles basées dans les pays du Sud. Le Compendium vise à corriger ce déséquilibre en aidant les fondations et les conseillers à trouver rapidement qui travaille sur le terrain.
La cartographie met en évidence, dans la mesure du possible, le travail dirigé par les femmes, les personnes de couleur, les jeunes, les groupes historiquement marginalisés et les personnes handicapées. Ces groupes jouent un rôle majeur dans la proposition de solutions justes et équitables alors qu'ils ont reçu le moins de ressources et causé le moins de dommages au climat.
How it was produced:
The Compendium is based on many sources of information, including climate justice and just transition networks funded by philanthropy, information by experts working in the field as well as desktop-based research. All the organisations listed have been given the opportunity to review the information we have included accurately captures their work and is up to date.
Based on our existing resources we have provided the core information in four languages: English, Arabic, Spanish, French. In partnership with Climate Cardinals we are working to further provide multilingual translation for organisation descriptions and hope that as we continue to develop the Compendium we will be able to further identify and add Non-English organisations. This is important because most climate justice literature and climate campaigning is written and accessible entirely in English which results in systematic barriers to accessing information on climate change.
1 Currently, less than 2% of global philanthropy goes toward supporting organisations working on climate mitigation, with approximately 0.5% going to environmental initiatives in the Global South (Edge Funders Alliance, 2022 & One Earth 2023). Of the philanthropy that is directed to climate, 95% of it is directed to white and overwhelmingly male-led climate advocacy groups (Solutions Project, 2017) & (Philanthropic Initiative for Racial Justice, 2021) and only 0.76% to youth climate movements (Youth Climate Justice Study, 2022).
Morena, E. et al. (2022), ““Beyond 2% from climate philanthropy to climate justice philanthropy”, EDGE Funders Alliance & United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD). URL [Accessed 03/03/23]
One Earth (2023) One Earth Project Marketplace. URL [Accessed 03/03/2023]
Solutions Project (2021) Justice + Equity. URL [Accessed 03/03/23]
DeBacker, L. & Patterson, J. (2021) “Environmental Funders: The Problem Isn’t Just Diversity, It’s Access to Money”, Inside Philanthropy. URL [Accessed 03/03/23)
Janus, K. K. (2017). Innovating Philanthropy. Stanford Social Innovation Review. DOI [Accessed 03/03/23]
Cyril, D. M et al. (2021) “Philanthropy’s response to the call for racial justice”, Philanthropic Initiative for Racial Equity (PRE). URL [Accessed 03/03/23]
Youth Climate Justice Study (Nov 2022) “Why Youth, Why Now”, Section 4 Slides: The Hour is Late using ClimateWorks Foundation data. URL [Accessed 03/03/23)
2 Kianni, S. (2022) “Language shouldn't be a barrier to climate action”, TED Conference URL [Accessed 03/03/23]