Adaptation at whose expense? Explicating the maladaptive potential of water storage and climate-resilient growth for Māori women in northern Aotearoa

IF 8.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Global Environmental Change Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102733
Danielle Johnson, Meg Parsons, Karen Fisher
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Abstract

Drawing on ethnographic research with Indigenous Māori women in northern Aotearoa (New Zealand) we challenge the presumed benefits of neoliberal, infrastructural-focussed climate adaptation, and advocate for far greater engagement with multiple subjectivities and intersecting inequalities in the design of climate adaptation in Global North, settler colonial contexts. Focussing on a government-led water storage project that aims to enhance local communities’ economic wellbeing through climate-adapted horticulture, we demonstrate how interlinked forms of marginalisation and privilege mediate the distribution of benefits from climate adaptation and decrease rather than increase wellbeing for multiply marginalised subjectivities. Combining the concept of racial capitalism with intersectionality we advance a novel theoretical framework to advance insights about more equitable and nuanced adaptation in an under-researched, settler colonial context. Using this framework, we explore the maladaptive potential of the water project which grows regional economic resilience through violent climate-related alterations to low-income, single and/or older Māori women’s bodies. We demonstrate how settler colonial legacies, structures, and intergenerational traumas are lived through and collide with intersecting racial, class, gender, and age-based disadvantages, that together mediate local labour relations and decision-making processes that ultimately exacerbate climate vulnerability for particular groups of Māori women in the region.

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适应以谁为代价?解释Māori奥特罗阿北部妇女的水储存和气候适应型增长的不适应潜力
通过对新西兰奥特罗阿北部Māori土著妇女的人种学研究,我们对新自由主义、以基础设施为重点的气候适应的假定好处提出了挑战,并主张在全球北部、移民殖民背景下的气候适应设计中,更多地参与多重主体性和交叉不平等。以政府主导的蓄水项目为重点,该项目旨在通过适应气候变化的园艺提高当地社区的经济福祉,我们展示了相互关联的边缘化和特权形式如何调节气候适应带来的利益分配,并减少而不是增加多重边缘化主体性的福祉。将种族资本主义的概念与交叉性相结合,我们提出了一个新的理论框架,以促进在研究不足的移民殖民背景下更公平和细致入微的适应。利用这一框架,我们探讨了水项目的不适应潜力,该项目通过对低收入、单身和/或老年Māori妇女身体的暴力气候相关改变来提高区域经济弹性。我们展示了殖民者的殖民遗产、结构和代际创伤是如何经历的,并与种族、阶级、性别和年龄的交叉劣势相冲突,这些劣势共同调解了当地的劳资关系和决策过程,最终加剧了该地区特定群体Māori妇女的气候脆弱性。
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来源期刊
Global Environmental Change
Global Environmental Change 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
18.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
146
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: Global Environmental Change is a prestigious international journal that publishes articles of high quality, both theoretically and empirically rigorous. The journal aims to contribute to the understanding of global environmental change from the perspectives of human and policy dimensions. Specifically, it considers global environmental change as the result of processes occurring at the local level, but with wide-ranging impacts on various spatial, temporal, and socio-political scales. In terms of content, the journal seeks articles with a strong social science component. This includes research that examines the societal drivers and consequences of environmental change, as well as social and policy processes that aim to address these challenges. While the journal covers a broad range of topics, including biodiversity and ecosystem services, climate, coasts, food systems, land use and land cover, oceans, urban areas, and water resources, it also welcomes contributions that investigate the drivers, consequences, and management of other areas affected by environmental change. Overall, Global Environmental Change encourages research that deepens our understanding of the complex interactions between human activities and the environment, with the goal of informing policy and decision-making.
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