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Development, Climate Change and Human Rights from the Margins to the Mainstream?

Authors :
Cameron, Edward
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2011.

Abstract

Since 2005, a growing number of vulnerable communities and nations have used the human rights lexicon to argue their case for an urgent and ambitious response to climate change. The purpose of this Social Development Department Working paper is to examine the emergence of a new discourse linking climate change and human rights, and to assess its social and political implications, particularly as they relate to development practitioners. The scope of this paper is to explore what relevance this new discourse has on what David Kennedy calls the 'vocabularies, expertise, and sensibilities' of development practitioners (Kennedy 2005). The methodology for this paper involved interviews with academics and policy practitioners who have shaped this emerging discourse; a wide-ranging literature review of texts relevant to the fields of development, climate change and human rights; discussions with development professionals who have the daily responsibility of operationalizing approaches to reducing vulnerability and building resilience; and finally drawing upon the author's own experience leading the Maldives' government's initiative on the Human Dimensions of Climate Change and as a consultant within the Social Dimensions of Climate Change Cluster of the World Bank's Social Development Department. It is important to stress that this paper is not a legal piece. Human rights are as much about ethical demands, calls for social justice, public awareness, advocacy, and political action as they are concerned with legal norms and rules. Sen has pointed out a 'theory of human rights cannot be sensibly confined within the juridical model in which it is frequently incarcerated' (Sen 2004, 319). Consequently this piece will focus on the wider, political economy aspects of the interface between human rights and climate change. It is further appropriate to state that this is not an advocacy piece. The paper deliberately avoids being normative or prescriptive in recommending a human rights-based approach to developing climate change operations. It does examine why vulnerable populations chose to embrace this approach, why they continue to view it as a transformative strategy, and what some of the successes and challenges have been.

Subjects

Subjects :
INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY RESEARCH
SPONSORS
EMISSIONS FROM LAND USE
NUMBER OF DEATHS
ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
TREATIES
PUBLIC SUPPORT
GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
CLIMATE REGIME
SOCIAL DIMENSIONS
HUMAN RIGHT
CLIMATE CHANGE REGIME
VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE
SPECIES
WATER SALINITY
CONVERGENCE
CLIMATE CHANGE RESPONSES
EXTREME WEATHER
IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
POLICY MAKERS
VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE ANALYSIS
HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
LAND USE
RAINFALL
EMISSIONS
UNEMPLOYMENT
RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE
PUBLIC AWARENESS
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
CLIMATE-RELATED EVENTS
HUMAN BEINGS
MENTAL HEALTH
DISEASES
CULTURAL RIGHTS
ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS
TREATY
CLIMATE CHANGE DEBATE
WAR
FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS
TEMPERATURE INCREASE
HUMIDITY
EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS
GLOBAL AVERAGE TEMPERATURE
GREENHOUSE GAS
HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
SECURITY OF PERSON
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GREENHOUSE GAS CONCENTRATIONS
SOCIAL UNREST
HUMAN HEALTH
EMISSIONS FROM LAND USE CHANGE
RAINFALL PATTERNS
INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE
PUBLIC SERVICES
ADEQUATE HEALTH CARE
MALARIA
WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY
CASH CROPS
DIVERGENCE
POOR HEALTH
SEA LEVEL RISE
DRAFT RESOLUTION
GLOBAL WARMING
LOW-CARBON
PROGRESS
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT
TEMPERATURE RISES
VULNERABILITY
HEALTH RISKS
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
DISABILITY
RAIN
CYCLONES
INTERNATIONAL BORDERS
SOCIAL COHESION
GLOBAL CLIMATE
MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE
ATMOSPHERE
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY
CORAL REEFS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION
FOOD PRODUCTION
RESPONSE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
WEATHER CONDITIONS
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS
BIODIVERSITY
LIVING CONDITIONS
PUBLIC OPINION
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
INFANT
DIRECT IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
VULNERABLE GROUPS
GREENHOUSE
SEA LEVEL
INFANT MORTALITY
INFORMED CONSENT
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE
STORM SURGES
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
EXPOSURE TO CLIMATE RISKS
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
CARBON SINKS
CONFRONTING CLIMATE CHANGE
INTERNATIONAL COVENANT
FOREST DEGRADATION
MINORITY
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS
METHANE
PESTICIDES
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
CITIZENSHIP
HURRICANES
CITIZENS
INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS
SOCIAL JUSTICE
INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENTS
CLIMATE IMPACTS
GLOBAL COMPACT
TEMPERATURE
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
DROUGHT
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE STABILIZATION
ETHNIC CLEANSING
RESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
SOCIAL SYSTEMS
REGIONAL AGREEMENTS
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
FOREST
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
CLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITY
HEALTH CARE
PRECIPITATION
DISASTERS
NATIONAL CLIMATE
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SAFE DRINKING WATER
RESPECT
NATURAL DISASTERS
GLOBAL TEMPERATURE
SOIL EROSION
TROPICAL STORMS
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS
NATIONAL POLICY
FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
CLIMATE SYSTEM
GOOD GOVERNANCE
MIGRATION
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
FORMS OF DISCRIMINATION
TUBERCULOSIS
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
INTERNATIONAL LAW
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOREST CONSERVATION
CYCLE OF POVERTY
ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
FORESTRY
SOCIETAL VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE
WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DEVELOPMENT INTERVENTIONS
POLICY REGIME
FLOODS
CLIMATE SCIENCE
PREVENTABLE DISEASES
HUMAN SECURITY
POLITICAL RIGHTS
NATIONAL SECURITY
CLIMATE
POLITICAL ACTION
GENDER INEQUALITIES
CAPACITY BUILDING
HUMAN LIFE
IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
POPULATION DENSITY
PRACTITIONERS
THREAT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
ADVERSE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
ECOSYSTEM
RURAL WOMEN
RIGHT TO LIFE
GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2456..87aba9ed64a9789786d80d84f128f93c