Sultana, Farhana2022-04-112022-04-112022-03-24http://hdl.handle.net/10919/109637Climate change has had unequal and uneven burdens across places whereby the planetary crisis involves a common but differentiated responsibility. The injustices of intensifying climate breakdown, overlapping with injustices from the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, have laid bare the fault lines of suffering across sites and scales. A climate justice framework helps us to think about and address these inequities. Climate justice fundamentally is about paying attention to how climate change multipliers impact people intersectionally, unevenly, and disproportionately, as well as redressing the resultant injustices in fair and equitable ways. In this talk, I discuss how and why a feminist climate justice perspective allows for more equitable interventions to be envisioned and co-created for meaningful impacts in a fractured world.Dimensions: 1080 x 720Duration: 00:48:24Size: 215.9 MBvideo/mp4video/webmimage/jpegtext.mp4-en.vttenIn CopyrightGenderClimate justiceClimate Justice, Gender, and Challenges in a Fractured WorldPresentationVirginia Tech