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Interlinked effects of climate change on youth sexual reproductive health and rights, gender equality and access to education: a review of the literature and stakeholder insights from Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia

気候変動が青少年の性と生殖に関する健康と権利、ジェンダー平等、教育へのアクセスに及ぼす相互に関連する影響:マラウイ、モザンビーク、ザンビアにおける文献レビューとステークホルダーの知見 (AI 翻訳)

Anne Karam, Hannah Kabelka, Joseph M. Zulu, Zaida A. Cumbe, Zindaba Chisiza, Pam Baatsen

Frontiers in Climate📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-05-08#気候科学Origin: Global
DOI: 10.3389/fclim.2026.1792268
原典: https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2026.1792268

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文は、気候変動が青少年の性と生殖に関する健康と権利(SRHR)、ジェンダー平等、教育に与える相互に関連する影響を、マラウイ、モザンビーク、ザンビアを対象に文献レビューとステークホルダーの知見から分析した。気候関連の混乱が既存の脆弱性を悪化させ、早期結婚や10代の妊娠などのリスクを高め、教育システムを脆弱化していることを示す。包括的でジェンダー変革的な対応の必要性を強調している。

English

This paper examines the interlinked effects of climate change on youth sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), gender equality, and education in Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia using literature review and stakeholder insights. It finds that climate-related disruptions compound existing vulnerabilities, increasing risks of early marriage, teenage pregnancy, and disrupting education systems. It calls for coordinated, gender-transformative responses.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本においても、気候変動の社会的影響への関心が高まっている。本論文は、気候変動が教育や健康に与える波及効果を統合的に捉える枠組みを提供し、日本の国際協力や国内の気候適応策において、脆弱層への影響を考慮する際の参考となる。

In the global GX context

This paper contributes to global understanding of the intersection between climate change and social determinants of health, education, and gender equality. It provides a framework for analyzing cumulative climate impacts, relevant for integrated climate adaptation policies and the international development agenda.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Researchers studying climate impacts on health and education can use the socio-ecological framework to analyze systemic effects in other contexts.

🏛政策担当者:Policymakers should note the need for intersectoral and youth-inclusive climate adaptation strategies that address SRHR and education.

📄 Abstract(原文)

Climate change is intensifying the frequency and severity of weather- and climate-related hazards worldwide, with Southern Africa experiencing particularly acute and unevenly distributed impacts. Despite contributing minimally to global greenhouse gas emissions, countries in the region face escalating burdens, including food and water insecurity, health system strain, and climate-induced displacement. Adolescents and young people are disproportionately affected, as climate shocks intersect with developmental, socioeconomic and structural inequalities, increasing risk to health, sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), education and gender equality. Yet these intersections remain underexplored in climate research and policy. Using an adapted socio-ecological framework that combines Bronfenbrenner’s model with the WHO operational framework for climate-resilient health systems, this study analyses climate change as a systemic disruptor that amplifies existing inequalities related to SRHR, gender and education in Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia. From a youth-centred, we combine a targeted literature and policy review with six sense-making and validation workshops, involving 88 youth advocates, and 15 semi-structured expert interviews. This design generates context-specific, stakeholder-validated evidence on cumulative climate impacts and implementation gaps across sectors. Findings show that climate-related disruptions to infrastructure, services and livelihoods compound pre-existing vulnerabilities, undermining access to SRHR services and education, reinforcing gendered risks and intensifying exclusion among marginalised youth. Climate change is increasing the risk of key SRHR issues, such as early marriage and teenage pregnancy, fragilizing education systems and opportunities with disrupted learning environments and increasing levels of gender-based, child violence and mental health concerns. Climate impacts on adolescents and young people are cumulative and mutually reinforcing, requiring coordinated, intersectoral and gender-transformative responses rather than fragmented, short-term interventions. Meaningful participation of adolescents and young people emerges as both a rights-based obligation and a practical condition for effective and equitable climate action.

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gxceed は公開メタデータに基づく研究支援データセットです。要約・翻訳・解説は AI 支援で生成されています。 最終的な解釈・検証は利用者が原典資料に基づいて行うことを前提とします。