Abstract
Abstract. In this intervention, we reflect on the potential of
environmental justice and climate justice approaches to reveal the politics
of climate change adaptation. Taking the attempts at dealing with extreme
flooding events in Venice as an example, we illustrate that different
dimensions at the core of the environmental justice concept (distributive and procedural justice and justice as recognition) are helpful to analyse and to politicise climate change adaptation interventions. We call for a transformative research agenda to reconfigure interventions and expertise to more closely account for the socio-political processes and narratives shaping coastal environments and to foster multiple epistemologies. Above all, this entails strengthening the inclusion of local (environmental) knowledge, the involvement of the populations affected by interventions in adaptation planning and the open discussion of political questions and values shaping interventions.
Funder
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
5 articles.
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