Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives”
<p>This special issue (SI) shows that environmental justice perspectives are especially useful for analysing current socio-ecological conflicts. These perspectives help to bridge epistemological and ontological gaps in inter- and transdisciplinary settings and promote normative and justice-ori...
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doaj-573947199c074a34b7311b2f07fd54902021-07-13T11:56:22ZdeuCopernicus PublicationsGeographica Helvetica0016-73122194-87982021-07-017630531410.5194/gh-76-305-2021Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives”A. L. BerchtJ. HeinS. Klepp<p>This special issue (SI) shows that environmental justice perspectives are especially useful for analysing current socio-ecological conflicts. These perspectives help to bridge epistemological and ontological gaps in inter- and transdisciplinary settings and promote normative and justice-oriented discussions on environmental struggles within and beyond the academy. Currently, the following two interrelated environmental crises and their impacts regularly make headlines: climate change and the impacts of the unsustainable use of the oceans. Still, for a large part of the global population – not only but especially in the Global North – both crises remain abstract, mainly becoming visible through news coverage of plastic waste in the oceans, storm surges and droughts, and through documentaries on sea-level rise and the destruction of ecosystems. However, the destruction of marine and coastal habitats and the effects of climate change are increasingly affecting people's daily lives. The effects of climate change, pollution, and marine resource overuse are creating serious disruption to livelihoods and leading to new socio-ecological conflicts and new claims. This SI aims to reflect and explore climate and marine narratives, environmental knowledge claims, multiple ontologies, climate change adaptation, and the spatial and temporal shaping of socio-ecological struggles for climate and marine justice in more detail. Furthermore, it takes up current strands of climate and marine justice scholarship and explores avenues for further research.</p>https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/76/305/2021/gh-76-305-2021.pdf |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
A. L. Bercht J. Hein S. Klepp |
spellingShingle |
A. L. Bercht J. Hein S. Klepp Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” Geographica Helvetica |
author_facet |
A. L. Bercht J. Hein S. Klepp |
author_sort |
A. L. Bercht |
title |
Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
title_short |
Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
title_full |
Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
title_fullStr |
Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
title_full_unstemmed |
Introduction to the special issue “Climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
title_sort |
introduction to the special issue “climate and marine justice – debates and critical perspectives” |
publisher |
Copernicus Publications |
series |
Geographica Helvetica |
issn |
0016-7312 2194-8798 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
<p>This special issue (SI) shows that environmental justice perspectives are
especially useful for analysing current socio-ecological conflicts. These
perspectives help to bridge epistemological and ontological gaps in inter-
and transdisciplinary settings and promote normative and justice-oriented
discussions on environmental struggles within and beyond the academy.
Currently, the following two interrelated environmental crises and their impacts regularly make headlines: climate change and the impacts of the unsustainable use of the oceans. Still, for a large part of the global population – not only but especially in the Global North – both crises remain abstract, mainly becoming visible through news coverage of plastic waste in the oceans, storm surges and droughts, and through documentaries on sea-level rise and the destruction of ecosystems. However, the destruction of marine and coastal habitats and the effects of climate change are increasingly affecting people's daily lives. The effects of climate change, pollution, and marine resource overuse are creating serious disruption to livelihoods and leading to new socio-ecological conflicts and new claims. This SI aims to reflect and explore climate and marine narratives, environmental knowledge claims, multiple ontologies, climate change adaptation, and the spatial and temporal shaping of socio-ecological struggles for climate and marine justice in more detail. Furthermore, it
takes up current strands of climate and marine justice scholarship and
explores avenues for further research.</p> |
url |
https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/76/305/2021/gh-76-305-2021.pdf |
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