Understanding climate change through gender relations

Bibliographic Information

Understanding climate change through gender relations

edited by Susan Buckingham and Virginie le Masson

(Routledge studies in hazards, disaster risk and climate change)

Routledge, 2018

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

Originally published: 2017

First issued in paperback 2018

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book explains how gender, as a power relationship, influences climate change related strategies, and explores the additional pressures that climate change brings to uneven gender relations. It considers the ways in which men and women experience the impacts of these in different economic contexts. The chapters dismantle gender inequality and injustice through a critical appraisal of vulnerability and relative privilege within genders. Part I addresses conceptual frameworks and international themes concerning climate change and gender, and explores emerging ideas concerning the reification of gender relations in climate change policy. Part II offers a wide range of case studies from the Global North and the Global South to illustrate and explain the limitations to gender-blind climate change strategies. This book will be of interest to students, scholars, practitioners and policymakers interested in climate change, environmental science, geography, politics and gender studies.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction Part 1: Structures 2. Moving beyond impacts: more answers to the 'gender and climate change' question 3. Integrating gender issues into the global climate change regime 4. Gender justice and climate justice: building women's economic and political agency through global partnerships 5. Gender and urban climate change policy: tackling crosscutting issues towards equitable, sustainable cities 6. Natures of masculinities: conceptualising industrial, ecomodern and ecological masculinities 7. The contribution of feminist perspectives to climate governance Part 2: Case studies 8. Gender, climate change and energy access in developing countries: state of the art 9. Everyday life in rural Bangladesh: understanding gender relations in the context of climate change 10. Investigating the gender inequality and climate change nexus in China 11. Revealing the patriarchal sides of climate change adaptation through intersectionality: a case study from Nicaragua 12 Safeguarding gender in REDD+: refl ecting on Mexico's institutional (in)capacities 13 'Women and men are equal so there is no need to develop different projects': assuming gender equality in development and climate-related projects 14. Co- housing: a double shift in roles? 15. Integrating gender and planning towards climate change response: theorising from the Swedish case 16. A gender- sensitive analysis of spatial planning instruments related to the management of natural hazards in Austria

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