Climate change through the lens of intersectionality
Indexed incrossref
Abstract
Investigations of the interconnectedness of climate change with human societies require profound analysis of relations among humans and between humans and nature, and the integration of insights from various academic fields. An intersectional approach, developed within critical feminist theory, is advantageous. An intersectional analysis of climate change illuminates how different individuals and groups relate differently to climate change, due to their situatedness in power structures based on context-specific and dynamic social categorisations. Intersectionality sketches out a pathway that stays clear of traps of essentialisation, enabling solidarity and agency across and beyond social categories. It can…
Citation impact
730
total citations
- FWCI
- 8.98
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 90
Citations per year
Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Intersectionality
- Climate change
- Agency (philosophy)
- Solidarity
- Sociology
- Context (archaeology)
- Power (physics)
- Through-the-lens metering
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Climate action
No related works found for this paper.