在尼日利亚产油区实现环境正义

Forrest Roberts
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摘要

本文探讨了尼日利亚产油地区环境正义的产生及其与贫困和妇女权力丧失的关系。对绝大多数尼日利亚人来说,获得司法救助充满挑战和限制,这一事实已经让妇女感到痛苦。这是对妇女的歧视。因此,获得环境正义对他们来说是一个额外的负担,也是该国产油的尼日尔三角洲地区人民的重大关切。激进的青年、妇女和社区以各种形式抗议他们因该地区的石油和天然气生产而遭受的不公正待遇。然而,尼日利亚政府的反应往往是残酷的镇压,导致该地区的环境恶化。因此,产油区面临三重危险。首先,对包括妇女在内的人民来说,诉诸司法仍然是一个巨大的挑战。第二,还有一项额外的负担,就是她们必须为争取环境正义而同串谋破坏环境的国家和国际石油公司进行斗争,而妇女承担了不成比例的主要负担,而她们在这场斗争中处于辅助地位。第三,在通过环境“清理”项目进行政策干预的地方,这种干预几乎没有正视妇女参与制定和执行关键政策的需要,这意味着妇女的重要问题被忽视,妇女继续遭受实质性的环境不公正。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Engendering access to environmental justice in Nigeria's oil producing areas
This article interrogates engendering access to environmental justice in Nigeria's oil producing areas and its connection with poverty and disempowerment of women. Women already suffer from the fact that access to justice for the vast majority of Nigerians is challenging and restrictive. It is discriminatory against women. Access to environmental justice is, therefore, an additional burden on them, and of significant concern to the people in the country's oil producing Niger Delta region. Militant youths, women and communities have protested in diverse forms against the injustice they suffer as a result of oil and gas production in the region. However, the Nigerian State has often responded with brutal repression resulting in deepening environmental insult in the region. The oil producing areas, therefore, suffer a triple jeopardy. First, access to justice remains a huge challenge for the people, including women. Secondly, there is the additional burden that they have to struggle for environmental justice against a State and international oil companies that are complicit in the adverse environmental desiderata, a disproportionate brunt of which is borne by women who, however, occupy an auxiliary position in the struggle. Thirdly, where there is policy intervention by way of environmental "clean up" projects, such interventions hardly face up to the need to involve women in developing and implementing key policies, which means that important issues for women are ignored and women continue to suffer substantive environmental injustice.
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