US Climate and Health Alliance

Archive

Taxonomy Archive: Climate and environmental justice/health equity

20

Apr 2018

0

Climate change, children’s rights, and the pursuit of intergenerational climate justice

Frequently forgotten in the global discussions and agreements on climate change are children and young people, who both disproportionately suffer the consequences of a rapidly changing climate, yet also offer innovative solutions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions (climate change mitigation) and adapt to climate change. Existing ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Climate Justice in Rural Southeastern United States: A review of Climate Change Impacts and Effects on Human Health

Climate justice is a local, national, and global movement to protect at-risk populations who are disproportionately affected by climate change. The social context for this review is the Southeastern region of the United States, which is particularly susceptible to climate change because of the geography of the area and the ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Advancing climate justice and the right to health through procedural rights

Scholars have increasingly recognized the ways in which climate change threatens the human rights of people around the world, with a disproportionate burden on the rights of already vulnerable persons. At particular risk to these populations is the right to health, as well as to interconnected human rights. Yet, scholars have ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Collective violence caused by climate change and how it threatens health and human rights

The weight of scientific evidence indicates that climate change is causally associated with collective violence. This evidence arises from individual studies over wide ranges of time and geographic location, and from two extensive meta-analyses. Complex pathways that underlie this association are not fully understood; however, ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Climate change, climate justice and the application of probabilistic event attribution to summer heat extremes in the California Central Valley

Probabilistic event attribution (PEA) is an important tool for assessing the contri- bution of climate change to extreme weather events. Here, PEA is applied to explore the climate attribution of recent extreme heat events in California’s Central Valley. Heat waves have become progressively more severe due to increasing relative ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Climate Change, Justice, and Adaptation among African American Communities in the Chesapeake Bay Region

In this paper, the authors present results from a study of climate change and community adaptation, focusing on two African American communities on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. These two communities are representative of small, resource-poor communities that are particularly prone to increased flooding, storms, and ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

It’s here! Are we ready? Five case studies of health promotion practices that address climate change from within Victorian health care settings.

ISSUE ADDRESSED: Climate changes and environmental degradation caused by anthropogenic activities are having an irrefutable impact on human health. The critical role played by health promotion in addressing environmental challenges has a history in seminal charters—such as the Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion—that ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Urban green space, public health, and environmental justice: The challenge of making cities ‘just green enough’

Urban green space, such as parks, forests, green roofs, streams, and community gardens, provides critical ecosystem services. Green space also promotes physical activity, psychological well-being, and the general public health of urban residents. This paper reviews the Anglo-American literature on urban green space, especially parks, ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Climate change and developing-country cities: implications for environmental health and equity

Climate change is an emerging threat to global public health. It is also highly inequitable, as the greatest risks are to the poorest populations, who have contributed least to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The rapid economic development and the concurrent urbanization of poorer countries mean that developing-country cities will be ...

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20

Apr 2018

0

Urban health inequities and the added pressure of climate change: an action-oriented research agenda

Climate change will likely exacerbate already existing urban social inequities and health risks, thereby exacerbating existing urban health inequities. Cities in low- and middle-income countries are particularly vulnerable. Urbanization is both a cause of and potential solution to global climate change. Most population growth in the ...

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