People and Climate Change
Vulnerability, Adaptation, and Social Justice
Herausgeber: Reyes Mason, Lisa; Rigg, Jonathan
People and Climate Change
Vulnerability, Adaptation, and Social Justice
Herausgeber: Reyes Mason, Lisa; Rigg, Jonathan
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Climate change is a profoundly social and political challenge. Through a globally diverse set of community-based examples, People and Climate Change questions why some groups are more vulnerable to the social and economic consequences of climate change than others, and what can be done about it through more participatory policymaking and interventions.
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Climate change is a profoundly social and political challenge. Through a globally diverse set of community-based examples, People and Climate Change questions why some groups are more vulnerable to the social and economic consequences of climate change than others, and what can be done about it through more participatory policymaking and interventions.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780190886455
- ISBN-10: 0190886455
- Artikelnr.: 54797902
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780190886455
- ISBN-10: 0190886455
- Artikelnr.: 54797902
Lisa Reyes Mason, PhD, MSW, is Assistant Professor in the College of Social Work at the University of Tennessee. Jonathan Rigg, PhD, is Chair of Human Geography in the School of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol, UK.
* Foreword
* By Michael Sherraden
* Chapter 1. Climate Change, Social Justice: Making the Case for
Community Inclusion
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Part I. Weather
* Chapter 2. Pathways to Climate Justice in a Desert Metropolis
* By Sharon Harlan, Paul Chakalian, Juan Declet-Barreto, David M.
Hondula, and G. Darrel Jenerette
* Chapter 3. Water Insecurity in Disaster and Climate Change Contexts:
A Feminist Political Ecology View
* By Bernadette P. Resurrección
* Chapter 4. Older People and Climate Change: Vulnerability and
Resilience to Extreme Weather in England
* By Katie Oven, Jonathan Wistow, and Sarah Curtis
* Part II. Land
* Chapter 5. Normalizing Discourses: Urban Flooding and Blaming the
Victim in Modern Santa Fe, Argentina
* By April Colette
* Chapter 6. Reclaiming Land: Adaptation Activities and Global
Environmental Change Challenges within Indigenous Communities
* By Shanondora Billiot and Jessica Parfait
* Chapter 7. Urban Development, Vulnerabilities, and Disasters in
Indonesia's Coastal Land Reclamations: Does Social Justice Matter?
* By Rita Padawangi
* Part III. Comparisons
* Chapter 8. Resilience to Climate Change in Uganda: Policy
Implications for Two Marginalized Societies
* By Shuaib Lwasa, James Ford, Lea Berrang Ford, Didacus Namanya,
IHACC, Ambrose Buyinza, and Benon Nabaasa
* Chapter 9. Gender, Politics, and Water in Australia and Bangladesh
* By Margaret Alston
* Chapter 10. The Indigenous Climate-Food-Health Nexus: Indigenous
Voices, Stories, and Lived Experiences in Canada, Uganda, and Peru
* By Sherilee L. Harper, Lea Berrang-Ford, Cesar Carcamo, Ashlee
Cunsolo, Victoria L. Edge, James Ford, Alejandro Llanos, Shuaib
Lwasa, and Didacus B. Namanya
* Chapter 11. Moving Forward for Community Inclusion and Policy Change
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Index
* By Michael Sherraden
* Chapter 1. Climate Change, Social Justice: Making the Case for
Community Inclusion
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Part I. Weather
* Chapter 2. Pathways to Climate Justice in a Desert Metropolis
* By Sharon Harlan, Paul Chakalian, Juan Declet-Barreto, David M.
Hondula, and G. Darrel Jenerette
* Chapter 3. Water Insecurity in Disaster and Climate Change Contexts:
A Feminist Political Ecology View
* By Bernadette P. Resurrección
* Chapter 4. Older People and Climate Change: Vulnerability and
Resilience to Extreme Weather in England
* By Katie Oven, Jonathan Wistow, and Sarah Curtis
* Part II. Land
* Chapter 5. Normalizing Discourses: Urban Flooding and Blaming the
Victim in Modern Santa Fe, Argentina
* By April Colette
* Chapter 6. Reclaiming Land: Adaptation Activities and Global
Environmental Change Challenges within Indigenous Communities
* By Shanondora Billiot and Jessica Parfait
* Chapter 7. Urban Development, Vulnerabilities, and Disasters in
Indonesia's Coastal Land Reclamations: Does Social Justice Matter?
* By Rita Padawangi
* Part III. Comparisons
* Chapter 8. Resilience to Climate Change in Uganda: Policy
Implications for Two Marginalized Societies
* By Shuaib Lwasa, James Ford, Lea Berrang Ford, Didacus Namanya,
IHACC, Ambrose Buyinza, and Benon Nabaasa
* Chapter 9. Gender, Politics, and Water in Australia and Bangladesh
* By Margaret Alston
* Chapter 10. The Indigenous Climate-Food-Health Nexus: Indigenous
Voices, Stories, and Lived Experiences in Canada, Uganda, and Peru
* By Sherilee L. Harper, Lea Berrang-Ford, Cesar Carcamo, Ashlee
Cunsolo, Victoria L. Edge, James Ford, Alejandro Llanos, Shuaib
Lwasa, and Didacus B. Namanya
* Chapter 11. Moving Forward for Community Inclusion and Policy Change
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Index
* Foreword
* By Michael Sherraden
* Chapter 1. Climate Change, Social Justice: Making the Case for
Community Inclusion
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Part I. Weather
* Chapter 2. Pathways to Climate Justice in a Desert Metropolis
* By Sharon Harlan, Paul Chakalian, Juan Declet-Barreto, David M.
Hondula, and G. Darrel Jenerette
* Chapter 3. Water Insecurity in Disaster and Climate Change Contexts:
A Feminist Political Ecology View
* By Bernadette P. Resurrección
* Chapter 4. Older People and Climate Change: Vulnerability and
Resilience to Extreme Weather in England
* By Katie Oven, Jonathan Wistow, and Sarah Curtis
* Part II. Land
* Chapter 5. Normalizing Discourses: Urban Flooding and Blaming the
Victim in Modern Santa Fe, Argentina
* By April Colette
* Chapter 6. Reclaiming Land: Adaptation Activities and Global
Environmental Change Challenges within Indigenous Communities
* By Shanondora Billiot and Jessica Parfait
* Chapter 7. Urban Development, Vulnerabilities, and Disasters in
Indonesia's Coastal Land Reclamations: Does Social Justice Matter?
* By Rita Padawangi
* Part III. Comparisons
* Chapter 8. Resilience to Climate Change in Uganda: Policy
Implications for Two Marginalized Societies
* By Shuaib Lwasa, James Ford, Lea Berrang Ford, Didacus Namanya,
IHACC, Ambrose Buyinza, and Benon Nabaasa
* Chapter 9. Gender, Politics, and Water in Australia and Bangladesh
* By Margaret Alston
* Chapter 10. The Indigenous Climate-Food-Health Nexus: Indigenous
Voices, Stories, and Lived Experiences in Canada, Uganda, and Peru
* By Sherilee L. Harper, Lea Berrang-Ford, Cesar Carcamo, Ashlee
Cunsolo, Victoria L. Edge, James Ford, Alejandro Llanos, Shuaib
Lwasa, and Didacus B. Namanya
* Chapter 11. Moving Forward for Community Inclusion and Policy Change
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Index
* By Michael Sherraden
* Chapter 1. Climate Change, Social Justice: Making the Case for
Community Inclusion
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Part I. Weather
* Chapter 2. Pathways to Climate Justice in a Desert Metropolis
* By Sharon Harlan, Paul Chakalian, Juan Declet-Barreto, David M.
Hondula, and G. Darrel Jenerette
* Chapter 3. Water Insecurity in Disaster and Climate Change Contexts:
A Feminist Political Ecology View
* By Bernadette P. Resurrección
* Chapter 4. Older People and Climate Change: Vulnerability and
Resilience to Extreme Weather in England
* By Katie Oven, Jonathan Wistow, and Sarah Curtis
* Part II. Land
* Chapter 5. Normalizing Discourses: Urban Flooding and Blaming the
Victim in Modern Santa Fe, Argentina
* By April Colette
* Chapter 6. Reclaiming Land: Adaptation Activities and Global
Environmental Change Challenges within Indigenous Communities
* By Shanondora Billiot and Jessica Parfait
* Chapter 7. Urban Development, Vulnerabilities, and Disasters in
Indonesia's Coastal Land Reclamations: Does Social Justice Matter?
* By Rita Padawangi
* Part III. Comparisons
* Chapter 8. Resilience to Climate Change in Uganda: Policy
Implications for Two Marginalized Societies
* By Shuaib Lwasa, James Ford, Lea Berrang Ford, Didacus Namanya,
IHACC, Ambrose Buyinza, and Benon Nabaasa
* Chapter 9. Gender, Politics, and Water in Australia and Bangladesh
* By Margaret Alston
* Chapter 10. The Indigenous Climate-Food-Health Nexus: Indigenous
Voices, Stories, and Lived Experiences in Canada, Uganda, and Peru
* By Sherilee L. Harper, Lea Berrang-Ford, Cesar Carcamo, Ashlee
Cunsolo, Victoria L. Edge, James Ford, Alejandro Llanos, Shuaib
Lwasa, and Didacus B. Namanya
* Chapter 11. Moving Forward for Community Inclusion and Policy Change
* By Lisa Reyes Mason and Jonathan Rigg
* Index