Zaren White -The Muse-
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. (CUP) — Knowledge of climate change’s irrevocable damage is becoming more common and widely shared. In spite of this, many of us are still stuck perceiving climate change as a purely environmental issue, distancing ourselves from the fact that we are completely dependent on the environment.
Just like any other species, our survival is jeopardized by environmental degradation.
It’s time to see climate change as what it essentially is, to us — a human issue. More than that, it is a human rights issue.
As the damage and depletion of the planet accelerates dangerously, the distinctly gendered repercussions of climate change are coming to the fore.
Beyond the impact on all human beings, climate change is distinctly linked to women’s rights and gender justice, and is an urgent global issue that needs to be framed with attention to gender due to its exacerbation of pre-existing inequalities.
The Oxfam publication *Climate Change and Gender Justice* notes that, “Climate change is not happening in a vacuum. . . . It is one trend interacting with many others,” including economic liberalization, globalization, conflict, unpredictable government policies, and health risks.
Although climate change reflects great injustices for both women and men, posing an increased threat to those suffering from poverty in developing nations — those who have contributed the least to greenhouse gas emissions — 70 per cent of the 1.3 billion people living in extreme poverty around the world are female, according to Oxfam.
As a social development issue, climate change is pertinent to women’s equality. The minimal feminist and gender-focused study and input on issues and policies related to climate change to date has resulted in the omission of gender issues from the overarching discourse developed globally, such as the fact that 1992’s United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change does not mention gender, with gender perspectives having been omitted from its analysis.
Our collective interaction with the environment affects every aspect of our existence as humans, so it’s crucial to explore how gender equality will be factored into the discussion as we move forward.
The current climate crisis reflects issues of women’s disadvantage, such as access to resources and domestic responsibilities, and underscores the need for the inclusion of gender-based viewpoints in environmental policy development.
We’re endangering our very survival by failing to curb limitless economic development, industrial expansion, insatiable use of resources and the effects of global warming.
This estrangement from nature that allows humans to feel impervious is especially true of those of us who are far removed, in terms of geography and wealth, from the immediate consequences of global warming.
As a privileged Canadian, I do not and will not experience the repercussions of climate change as intensely as a poor farmer in Asia whose crops are ruined by drought or flood, or a woman whose household workload increases due to prolonged searches for increasingly-scarce water.
All human beings will become threatened, but it is poor nations in which livelihood is more immediately dependent on farming, reliable rainfall and nature’s resources where people are more vulnerable to the detrimental changes induced by global warming. Women, being the world’s primary farmers according to the 2009 report by the United Nations Population Fund, are in turn particularly vulnerable.
Climate change, poverty and gender are interconnected. With climate change aggravating existing inequalities such as gender, many social scientists, scholars and women’s rights advocates have reached a consensus: climate change must be understood as a human rights and social development issue first and foremost.
Moving forward as a society, issues of gender equality should be prioritized in the development of strategies and policies to adapt to climate change as a global community.