{"id":25923,"date":"2016-04-19T11:00:49","date_gmt":"2016-04-19T01:00:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=25923"},"modified":"2016-04-19T11:25:57","modified_gmt":"2016-04-19T01:25:57","slug":"climate-justice-and-australias-climate-priorities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/climate-justice-and-australias-climate-priorities\/","title":{"rendered":"Climate justice and Australia\u2019s climate priorities"},"content":{"rendered":"
The real climate debate isn\u2019t around whether anthropocentric climate change is happening, but the nature, speed and scale of action we need to take in response. \u00a0\u2018Climate justice\u2019 situates how we should respond to climate change as a moral, ethical and political matter requiring a just response, rather than just a practical or physical problem to be solved. \u00a0As with every great public dilemma, a variety of preferences exist in relation to what action should be taken, depending on differences in understandings of how the world works and normative preferences as to what constitutes the good society. Various forms of \u2018action on climate change\u2019 could promote a widely divergent array of social outcomes\u2014quite apart from the question of emissions reduction.<\/span><\/p>\n One of the key ideological divides might be described as that which exists between \u2018the camp of whatever\u2019 and \u2018the camp of justice\u2019. Put broadly, the \u2018camp of whatever\u2019 advocates the view that the threat of climate change is so great and so urgent, that ends justify means\u2014what matters is that sufficient solutions are found quickly and effectively enough to avert global environmental and economic catastrophe.<\/span><\/p>\n For example, as<\/span> Robyn Eckersley, Professor of Political Science at the University of Melbourne<\/span><\/a>, has noted, \u2018the<\/span> very prospect of civilisational collapse has been invoked to justify the suspension or truncation of democracy to ensure the protection of planetary boundaries through authoritarianism or technocratic planetary management via geoengineering techniques such as solar radiation management.\u2019 The \u2018camp of whatever\u2019 may, for example, be prepared to entertain or tolerate the radical commoditisation of nature, replacement of existing biomes with monocultures, mass displacement of people, and further concentration of corporate power.<\/span><\/p>\n The \u2018camp of justice\u2019 is also preoccupied with <\/span>the urgent pursuit of emissions reductions to limit global warming, but with the added qualification that action should be founded on an ethic of care for people and the natural world, with a fair and equitable distribution of the benefits and burdens. It is inflected through an appreciation of the historical origins and context of the present crisis, and a deep awareness that neither culpability nor consequences are equally shared. Nor are all groups affected equally\u2014in terms of gender, for example<\/span> the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) work on Gender and Climate Change <\/span><\/a>found<\/span> that women are more vulnerable than men to climate change impacts. Climate justice offers a progressive and ethically sound framework for determining priorities in responses to climate change.<\/span> Mary Robinson, the former President of Ireland<\/span><\/a> and one of the world\u2019s most prominent proponents of climate justice, describes this way of thinking as linking:<\/span><\/p>\n \u2018human rights and development to achieve a human-centred approach, safeguarding the rights of the most vulnerable people and sharing the burdens and benefits of climate change and its impacts equitably and fairly.\u2019<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Robinson points out that, far from being a fringe proposition, the path of climate justice is inherent in the outcome of<\/span> COP 21<\/span><\/a> in Paris, which proposed the adoption of the following protocol by:<\/span><\/p>\n \u2018Emphasizing with serious concern the urgent need to address the significant gap between the aggregate effect of Parties\u2019 mitigation pledges in terms of global annual emissions of greenhouse gases by 2020.\u2019<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Climate justice is also \u2018nature centric\u2019, to the extent that it involves a rejection of false \u2018solutions\u2019 that would come at the expense of preserving biodiversity and ecosystems.<\/span><\/p>\n Climate justice is neither anti-technology nor atavistic. Indeed it\u2019s future oriented, appreciating that the threat of rising emissions offers the great opportunity for profound advance in human society through, for example, renewable energy technologies and a reprioritising of low-carbon high social value activities like care.<\/span><\/p>\n Australia must rapidly reduce carbon emissions in line with the science to a zero carbon economy, and must phase out all fossil fuel extraction. On those foundations and in no particular order, here are seven climate justice priorities that should condition the nature of climate action taken by Australia:<\/span><\/p>\n Transformation is inevitable; disruption is to be expected and change is the new normal, but we can still decide how we are going to treat each other in a shifting world. A climate justice approach offers the hope that, as<\/span> Naomi Klein<\/span><\/a> says, \u2018while things are already getting hotter, they don\u2019t have to get meaner.\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" The real climate debate isn\u2019t around whether anthropocentric climate change is happening, but the nature, speed and scale of action we need to take in response. \u00a0\u2018Climate justice\u2019 situates how we should respond to climate …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":502,"featured_media":26003,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1576,283,1294],"class_list":["post-25923","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-climate","tag-climate-change","tag-environment"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n\n