Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

“Nothing About Us Without Us” — The Barriers and Enablers of Persons with Disabilities as Climate Change Agents

Moen, Eleonora LU (2022) SIMZ31 20221
Graduate School
Abstract
This paper investigates what the barriers and enablers are for persons with disabilities and organisations of persons with disabilities to engage in climate action. The countries analysed are Bangladesh and Madagascar as two countries in the Global South who are similarly impacted by climate change. Persons with disabilities are one of the most marginalised groups in any society and one of the most heavily impacted groups by climate change. Living with a disability, they have invaluable knowledge on risk assessment and problem-solving skills, yet they often have no voice in policy making on climate change. Using the Capability Approach and Ableism within an Environmental Justice framework, this paper analyses the respondents’ stories... (More)
This paper investigates what the barriers and enablers are for persons with disabilities and organisations of persons with disabilities to engage in climate action. The countries analysed are Bangladesh and Madagascar as two countries in the Global South who are similarly impacted by climate change. Persons with disabilities are one of the most marginalised groups in any society and one of the most heavily impacted groups by climate change. Living with a disability, they have invaluable knowledge on risk assessment and problem-solving skills, yet they often have no voice in policy making on climate change. Using the Capability Approach and Ableism within an Environmental Justice framework, this paper analyses the respondents’ stories gathered via interviews and surveys to better understand how they are impacted by climate change, and what their experiences have been engaging in climate action. The results show that whilst persons with disabilities are very concerned and impacted by the consequences of climate change, their engagement in climate action is riddled with inaccessibility issues, prejudice, and discrimination. Often, they are not represented in governmental, NGO, or civil society efforts on climate change, and many report to lack the capacity to bring climate change onto the agenda within the organisations of persons with disabilities. Thanks to awareness-raising and advocacy efforts, the situation has improved somewhat, but much more work and research needs to be done for disability inclusion within the climate sector. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Moen, Eleonora LU
supervisor
organization
course
SIMZ31 20221
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
disability, climate change, environmental justice, accessibility, discrimination, capability approach, ableism
language
English
id
9098940
date added to LUP
2022-09-20 08:50:45
date last changed
2022-09-20 08:51:07
@misc{9098940,
  abstract     = {{This paper investigates what the barriers and enablers are for persons with disabilities and organisations of persons with disabilities to engage in climate action. The countries analysed are Bangladesh and Madagascar as two countries in the Global South who are similarly impacted by climate change. Persons with disabilities are one of the most marginalised groups in any society and one of the most heavily impacted groups by climate change. Living with a disability, they have invaluable knowledge on risk assessment and problem-solving skills, yet they often have no voice in policy making on climate change. Using the Capability Approach and Ableism within an Environmental Justice framework, this paper analyses the respondents’ stories gathered via interviews and surveys to better understand how they are impacted by climate change, and what their experiences have been engaging in climate action. The results show that whilst persons with disabilities are very concerned and impacted by the consequences of climate change, their engagement in climate action is riddled with inaccessibility issues, prejudice, and discrimination. Often, they are not represented in governmental, NGO, or civil society efforts on climate change, and many report to lack the capacity to bring climate change onto the agenda within the organisations of persons with disabilities. Thanks to awareness-raising and advocacy efforts, the situation has improved somewhat, but much more work and research needs to be done for disability inclusion within the climate sector.}},
  author       = {{Moen, Eleonora}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{“Nothing About Us Without Us” — The Barriers and Enablers of Persons with Disabilities as Climate Change Agents}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}