Global justice and disasters

Clark, Nigel and Chhotray, Vasudha and Few, Roger (2013) Global justice and disasters. Geographical Journal, 179 (2). pp. 105-113. ISSN 0016-7398

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Abstract

Critical inquiry into the relationship between natural hazards and disasters has raised pressing questions about the uneven exposure and resilience of different social groups. This paper argues that human-induced climate change and its implication in a range of extreme events extends and complicates the pursuit of justice in the context of differentiated vulnerability to hazards. But the challenge of living with natural hazards can provoke and inspire the idea of global environmental justice in other ways. Sustained consideration of the unpredictability of physical environments draws us into engagement with the temporality and spatiality of earth processes. It points to the ways that any extended place-based inhabitation must involve demanding accommodations to environmental uncertainty – raising questions about how to ‘do justice’ to these achievements. Confronting forms of hardship that are triggered by the dynamics of the earth itself can also be taken as a prompt to conceive of environmental justice not only in regard to what others deserve or are entitled to, but in terms of what might be offered simply in response to their suffering. In this way, the paper proposes, thinking through natural hazard and disaster might play a part in re-imagining the very concept of environmental justice.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Geographical Journal
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1900/1904
Subjects:
?? natural hazarddisaster global environmental justice global time earth processes climate changeearth-surface processesgeography, planning and development ??
ID Code:
62736
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
07 Mar 2013 09:52
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 13:39