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DOI10.1080/14693062.2020.1824892
Applying intersectionality to climate hazards: a theoretically informed study of wildfire in northern Saskatchewan
Walker H.M.; Reed M.G.; Fletcher A.J.
发表日期2021
ISSN1469-3062
卷号21期号:2
英文摘要Impacts and losses as a result of climate hazards are experienced unevenly across communities and can prove devastating to the health and well-being of local residents. Contextual approaches for understanding vulnerability and adaptation have focused on why diverse individuals and groups experience the effects of climate change differently, while values-based approaches place emphasis on identifying the subjective values individuals and communities wish to preserve. Both approaches contribute to locally responsive adaptation, but are rarely applied simultaneously. In this paper, we propose intersectionality as a framework that links and builds upon contextual and values-based approaches and demonstrate its efficacy through an empirical example of a major wildfire event in northern Saskatchewan, Canada. An intersectional framework identified how impacts and losses to locally significant values differed across intersections of location, race, ethnicity, gender and age and how these differences were influenced by broader social structures and power relationships, such as histories of colonization and gendered norms and expectations. Practical implications for the development of inclusive and equitable adaptation policy and planning were also identified, including the need to: (a) expand the range of impacts considered and recognize how outcomes differ across social groups; (b) enhance diverse community members’ participation in planning efforts, and (c) acknowledge and build upon what local residents are already doing in response to hazards in their communities. Key policy insights Failure to consider how impacts and invisible losses are experienced across intersections of identity can lead to adaptation policy and practice that reinforce existing social inequalities. An intersectional analysis revealed a suite of context-specific, locally-relevant values and systems of power that shaped how communities experience, respond to, and plan for climate hazards. The application of an intersectional framework can provide practical direction for adaptation policy that: (1) responds to differing experiences and values across social groups; (2) recognizes agency and builds on what people are already doing; and, (3) addresses root causes of vulnerability. © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
英文关键词adaptation; climate hazards; equity; inclusion; intersectionality; wildfire
来源期刊CLIMATE POLICY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/183689
作者单位School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada; Department of Sociology and Social Studies, University of Regina, Regina, Canada
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Walker H.M.,Reed M.G.,Fletcher A.J.. Applying intersectionality to climate hazards: a theoretically informed study of wildfire in northern Saskatchewan[J],2021,21(2).
APA Walker H.M.,Reed M.G.,&Fletcher A.J..(2021).Applying intersectionality to climate hazards: a theoretically informed study of wildfire in northern Saskatchewan.CLIMATE POLICY,21(2).
MLA Walker H.M.,et al."Applying intersectionality to climate hazards: a theoretically informed study of wildfire in northern Saskatchewan".CLIMATE POLICY 21.2(2021).
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