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Från Rio via Kyoto, till Marrakech. Hur har rättviseproblematiken tolkats i anpassningsdiskussionerna?

Olsson, Lena (2007)
Department of Political Science
Abstract
Global climate change is one of the greatest challenges in our history. As the average temperature is rising due to anthropogenic emissions, impacts such as floods, droughts and hurricanes, affect the lives of millions of people. Though the least developed countries are least responsible for emissions, they are the worst affected. This thesis focuses on environmental justice in the adaptation discourse. By outlining the adaptation discourse from the United Framework Convention on Climate Change principles, to the Marrakesh Accords, via the Kyotoprotocol my ambition is to analyse how environmental justice has been interpreted in relation to the adaptation discourse. I identify responsibility, vulnerability, sensitivity and adaptation as... (More)
Global climate change is one of the greatest challenges in our history. As the average temperature is rising due to anthropogenic emissions, impacts such as floods, droughts and hurricanes, affect the lives of millions of people. Though the least developed countries are least responsible for emissions, they are the worst affected. This thesis focuses on environmental justice in the adaptation discourse. By outlining the adaptation discourse from the United Framework Convention on Climate Change principles, to the Marrakesh Accords, via the Kyotoprotocol my ambition is to analyse how environmental justice has been interpreted in relation to the adaptation discourse. I identify responsibility, vulnerability, sensitivity and adaptation as important theoretical concepts which will guide me in my analysis. Through a critical reading I conclude that historically the adaptation discourse has mainly been interpreted through a Northern perspective that is to reduce emissions. As the effects of climate change exacerbate already existing inequalities adaptation has in recent years been highlighted. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Olsson, Lena
supervisor
organization
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Adaptation, Environmental Justice, Climate Change, Vulnerability, Responsibility, Social sciences, Samhällsvetenskaper
language
Swedish
id
1319685
date added to LUP
2008-01-08 00:00:00
date last changed
2008-01-30 00:00:00
@misc{1319685,
  abstract     = {{Global climate change is one of the greatest challenges in our history. As the average temperature is rising due to anthropogenic emissions, impacts such as floods, droughts and hurricanes, affect the lives of millions of people. Though the least developed countries are least responsible for emissions, they are the worst affected. This thesis focuses on environmental justice in the adaptation discourse. By outlining the adaptation discourse from the United Framework Convention on Climate Change principles, to the Marrakesh Accords, via the Kyotoprotocol my ambition is to analyse how environmental justice has been interpreted in relation to the adaptation discourse. I identify responsibility, vulnerability, sensitivity and adaptation as important theoretical concepts which will guide me in my analysis. Through a critical reading I conclude that historically the adaptation discourse has mainly been interpreted through a Northern perspective that is to reduce emissions. As the effects of climate change exacerbate already existing inequalities adaptation has in recent years been highlighted.}},
  author       = {{Olsson, Lena}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Från Rio via Kyoto, till Marrakech. Hur har rättviseproblematiken tolkats i anpassningsdiskussionerna?}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}