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What links gender with climate change mitigation?

A new study suggests that gender, alongside other identities like race, class, and age, has a powerful influence on people's experience of, and resilience to, climate change

The findings claim that outdated assumptions regarding gender continue to hinder effective and fair policymaking, along with the action for climate mitigation. Photo: iSTOCKPHOTO
The findings claim that outdated assumptions regarding gender continue to hinder effective and fair policymaking, along with the action for climate mitigation. Photo: iSTOCKPHOTO

A study led by Dr Jacqueline Lau from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University (Coral CoE at JCU) and WorldFish , suggested that gender, alongside other identities like race, class, and age, has a powerful influence on people's experience of, and resilience to, climate change.

The findings claimed that outdated assumptions regarding gender continue to hinder effective and fair policymaking, along with the action for climate mitigation and adaptation.

She said the four most common and interlinked assumptions found are: women are innately caring and connected to the environment; women are a homogenous and vulnerable group; gender equality is a women's issue and; gender equality is a numbers game.

"Although there is a global mandate to work towards gender equality in climate change mitigation and adaptation, efforts are hindered by a set of assumptions about gender, long critiqued in development studies," Dr Lau said.

The study draws on post-2014 gender and climate change literature, to give an overview of how the gender assumptions manifest across recent work in adaptation, mitigation, and broader climate change policy, practice, and research.

The review of the literature takes a closer look at how these assumptions narrowly diagnose the causes of gender inequality. "As a result, we see too many strategies that have unintended—and even counterproductive—consequences," said Dr Pip Cohen, from WorldFish. "For instance, strategies that target women only may overburden them, cause a backlash, or obscure the vulnerabilities of other groups."

The study offers lessons for a more informed pursuit of gender equality in climate change research, policy, and practice.The authors said progressing gender equality means breaking down stereotypes and prejudices about gender--creating environments to enable all people to exercise their agency to cope, change and adapt.

Dr Lau said she was surprised to find so many examples of gender assumptions in climate change practice. She explained that a first step in disrupting these assumptions is to lay them bare and explain why development research has found them to be problematic.

"The social and cultural expectations about what it is to be a woman or a man in any given society will shape people's wellbeing," Dr Lau said.

She said alongside efforts to dismantle broader barriers to gender equality, better and more coordinated efforts are needed from practitioners and researchers to disrupt and counteract unhelpful assumptions.

"Pursuing gender equality in climate change policy and practice is critical, and decades of experience in development offer lessons for how to do it well," Dr Lau said.

"Ultimately, we want to see equitable opportunities for all people to realise their full potential. Where no one is left behind."

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