Inclusive urban futures: climate justice in small island developing states
包摂的な都市の未来:小島嶼開発途上国における気候正義 (AI 翻訳)
Meg Parsons, Michelle Mycoo
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
小島嶼開発途上国(SIDS)における都市気候適応を気候正義の7つの側面(分配的、手続き的、認識的、矯正的、世代間、多種間)から分析。質的文書分析により、適応が社会包摂と歴史的不平等の是正の機会となることを論じる。
English
Examines urban climate adaptation in Small Island Developing States through the lens of climate justice, analyzing seven interrelated dimensions (distributive, procedural, recognitional, epistemic, corrective, intergenerational, multi-species). Uses qualitative document analysis to argue that adaptation can strengthen social inclusion and rectify historical inequities.
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
日本はSIDSではないが、気候正義の多面的枠組みは日本の適応政策や地域コミュニティとの関わり方にも示唆を与える。
In the global GX context
Provides a comprehensive climate justice framework for urban adaptation in SIDS, relevant for global discussions on equitable climate action and resilience-building.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Offers a structured multi-dimensional justice framework for analyzing adaptation, useful for integrating equity into climate scholarship.
🏛政策担当者:Highlights the need to embed fairness and inclusivity in adaptation planning, especially for vulnerable island nations.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Climate justice is viewed by small island developing states (SIDS) as critical to their transformative development, especially given that their carbon footprints are small, but the severity of climate change impacts is increasing, forcing them to divert scarce financial resources away from development to disaster preparedness and post disaster recovery. Urban dwellers are highly disadvantaged by frequent flooding and more intense tropical cyclones resulting increasingly in calls from urban stakeholders for greater inclusiveness in shaping the urban future. Climate justice offers a crucial lens for examining urban climate adaptation in SIDS, highlighting the need to urgently address underlying inequities and power imbalances. This paper seeks to explore the critical question of how to take action to achieve urban adaptation in a manner that is simultaneously fair and inclusive. It specifically examines how SIDS can pursue urban adaptation in ways that uphold seven interrelated dimensions of climate justice: distributive, procedural, recognitional, epistemic, corrective, intergenerational, and multi-species justice. It includes examples from the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and the Pacific, using a qualitative document-based analysis drawing on grey and published literature on urban adaptation initiatives. The main argument put forward in this paper is that urban adaptation in SIDS is not only critical for survival, but it offers an opportunity for transformative change. If done right, climate adaptation can strengthen social inclusion, rectify historical inequities, and safeguard both people and ecosystems for generations to come.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- semanticscholar https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-5295/ae4059first seen 2026-06-29 07:59:23
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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。