Gender and the Social Dimensions of Climate Change

Gender and the Social Dimensions of Climate Change

Rural and Resource Contexts of the Global North

Reed, Maureen G.; Fletcher, Amber J.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

09/2022

210

Dura

Inglês

9780367544188

15 a 20 dias

453

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1

Wildfire in Northern Saskatchewan: Reflections for Intersectional Climate Hazards Research and Adaptation Practice

Heidi Walker

Reflection on Chapter 1

From Point A to Point B

Nancy Lafleur

Chapter 2

Seeking Safe Refuge in Regional Australia: Experiences of Hazards and Practices of Safety among Women from Refugee Backgrounds

Shefali Juneja Lakhina and Christine Eriksen

Reflection on Chapter 2

Diversity and Inclusion in Humanitarian Protection, Refugee Resettlement, and Emergency Services in Australia

Sherryl Reddy

Chapter 3

Moving Away from Climate Crises: Women's Engagement in Natural Resource Decision-Making and Community Monitoring

Leah Levac, Jane Stinson, and Deborah Stienstra

Reflection on Chapter 3

Anchoring the Hope: Decision-making Safeguards to Make Women's Voices Count

Anna Johnston

Chapter 4

Tracing Resistance: Hypermasculinity and Climate Change Denial in the Heart of Alberta's Oil Country

Angeline Letourneau and Debra Davidson

Reflection on Chapter 4

Finding Balance: Gender, Extractive Industries, and Climate Change

Mary Boyden

Chapter 5

Embodied Perceptions, Everydayness, and Simultaneity in Climate Governance by Spanish Women Pastoralists

Federica Ravera, Elisa Oteros-Rozas, and Maria Fernandez Gimenez

Reflection on Chapter 5

The Scarlett Attack

Lucia Cobos

Chapter 6

Leadership in Mountain and Wildland Professions in Canada: Examining the Impacts of Gender, Safety, and Climate Change

Rachel Reimer and Christine Eriksen

Reflection on Chapter 6

Where is the Climbing Ranger?

Alison Criscitiello

Chapter 7

Contemporary Feminist Analysis of Australian Farm Women in the Context of Climate Changes

Margaret Alston, Josephine Clarke, and Kerri Whittenbury

Reflection on Chapter 7

What is Man-Made can be Unmade

Alana Johnson

Index
climate change;intersectionality;climate hazards;global north;adaptation;vulnerability;transformation;Young Man;Canadian Environmental Assessment Act;La Ronge;Public Engagement;UN;Monash;Wildfire Response;Illawarra Region;Intersectional Analysis;Refugee Backgrounds;Wildland Firefighting;Northern Saskatchewan;Intersectional Lens;Agri Food Systems;Socio-economic Class;Extractivist Mindset;Migrant Backgrounds;Effective Climate Change Mitigation;NSW Government;Wildfire Event;Extensive Livestock Production;Greater Sydney Metropolitan Area;Everyday Practices