@kgrove80.bsky.social et al. study resilience & CJ in Miami, where language use varies in climate activism. They neither reject the idea of resilience nor try to stabilize it. Instead, they support localized justice struggles by embracing the term’s varied notions and uses. https://tinyurl.com/y9mmx6wy
State and intergovernmental institutions often organize around targets like the SDGs & 30x30. Critics claim such goals suffer from poor scope, execution & outcomes. But @laurengifford.bsky.social @dianaliv.bsky.social @lisajac.bsky.social show global targets can also advance transformative change.
Here, Earth system justice means realizing social justice while staying within Earth System Boundaries. This entails integrating biophysical & social targets through harm reduction for vulnerable groups, equitable resource access, and addressing environmental change at its root. https://tinyurl.com/2trnb37p
Financial systems have been implicated in climate change from the start. Yet they’re also central to wealth redistribution and thus to CJ. @jenniecstephens.bsky.social and @martinsokol.bsky.social locate a profound contradiction where central banks aim to stabilize an inherently unstable system.
Instead of reactively coping with inevitable financial crisis, central banks should coordinate and initiate an intentional ‘creative disruption’ that reorients the economy toward equitable sustainability. To this end, they offer a monetary policy toolbox for climate justice. https://tinyurl.com/3js6x9bw
Lastly, @joelecorreia.bsky.social links up financial restitution with epistemic justice. He evaluates loss and damage (L&D) through study of 12 Indigenous land restitution cases in Latin America. Not only do restitution and reparations fail to establish commensurability between harms and payments…
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