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Intersecting injustices and competing narratives for climate change​

DISTINGUISHED LECTURE IN EMERGING & SYSTEMIC RISKS

Intersecting injustices and competing narratives for climate change

The climate crisis is at the intersection of two sets of injustice. The first is the obvious one concerning the businesses and governments (historically in the West) that have caused the majority of carbon emissions. These affect the majority of people in the world who have played little or no part in causing it yet experience the worst of its impacts – the first injustice. The second injustice is strangely less obvious and hardly discussed. Most of those same people who are badly affected by climate change are already poor and vulnerable. Climate change has not caused that poverty, so why is this ignored?

Terry Cannon

Emeritus Research Fellow 

Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex, U.K.

Honorary Professor at University College London

Special Session of York University

Climate Change Research Month

HYBRID SESSION 14 | THURSDAY, MARCH 21

NOON to 1 P.M. EST

ADERSIM EOC, N004 Schulich Building, York University

ZOOM REGISTRATION:yorku.ca/research/yemerge/lectures.​

Date

Mar 21 2024
Expired!

Time

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

Location

HYBRID SESSION : PHYSICAL LOCATION: ADERSIM EOC, N004 Schulich Building, York University
Online at Zoom Webinar: Register for the link at: www.yorku.ca/research/yemerge/lectures
Category

Organizer

CIFAL York
Phone
6478788364
Email
cifalpresident@yorku.ca
Website
https://www.yorku.ca/cifal
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