The colour of climate change: making the racial injustice of climate change visible

IF 1.4 4区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Jeremy Williams
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

ABSTRACT Drawing on a presentation given at the Geographical Association’s Annual Conference in April 2021 (Williams, 2021a), this article investigates the way that depictions of planet Earth are often simplified to green continents on blue oceans, accidentally universalising a white and western perspective of the Earth. The article demonstrates how this effect is evident in language too, where commentators or campaigns often use ‘we’ to create a sense of a common human experience. This universalising tendency reinforces existing Eurocentric geographies, obscuring the inequalities of climate change and the fact that some areas of the world are much more vulnerable to it than others. These inequalities fall along racial lines, with people of colour much more likely to be adversely affected by climate change, while majority white countries bear the greatest responsibility for historical emissions. To make the racial dimension of climate change visible, this article argues for a greater focus on the perspectives of people of colour in climate discourse.
气候变化的颜色:使气候变化的种族不公正可见
摘要根据2021年4月地理协会年会(Williams,2021a)上的一篇演讲,本文调查了地球的描述通常被简化为蓝色海洋上的绿色大陆的方式,意外地将地球的白色和西方视角普遍化。这篇文章展示了这种影响在语言中也是显而易见的,评论员或竞选活动经常使用“我们”来创造一种共同的人类体验感。这种普遍化趋势强化了现有的以欧洲为中心的地理位置,掩盖了气候变化的不平等,以及世界上一些地区比其他地区更容易受到气候变化影响的事实。这些不平等是按种族划分的,有色人种更有可能受到气候变化的不利影响,而白人占多数的国家对历史排放负有最大责任。为了让气候变化的种族层面显而易见,本文主张在气候话语中更加关注有色人种的观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Geography
Geography GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
21.40%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: An international journal, Geography meets the interests of lecturers, teachers and students in post-16 geography.
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