This book explores the role of feminist activists in The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and highlights the progress they have made in mainstreaming gender as a key issue in global climate governance.
It is now commonplace for gender to be framed as a political issue in global climate politics within academic scholarship, but there is typically a lack of robust empirical analysis of existing advocacy approaches. Filling this lacuna, Joanna Flavell interrogates the political strategies of the Women and Gender Constituency (WGC) in the UNFCCC (The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change). Through a conceptual framework that integrates climate change with intersectional critical inquiry and political practice, Flavell analyses hundreds of historical documents, coupled with interviews and observations from two UNFCCC conferences. This research uncovers a so-far untold story about the history of the UNFCCC that foregrounds gender and feminist advocacy, highlighting the importance of the WGC in shaping dominant narratives of global climate governance through a series of rhetorical and procedural strategies. Overall, the book draws important conclusions around power in global climate governance and opens up new avenues for advancing a feminist green politics.
This volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of environmental justice, climate politics and governance, environmental activism, and gender studies more broadly.
Author(s): Joanna Flaveli
Series: Routledge Studies in Gender and Environments
Publisher: Routledge/Earthscan
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 198
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
List of Acronyms
1 Introduction
Why ‘Gender and Climate Change’?
The UNFCCC as a Site of Inquiry
Overview of the Book
Bibliography
2 Enduring Debates in Feminist Climate Praxis
Theorising Feminist Climate Activism
Enduring Debates
Conclusion
Bibliography
3 Ecofeminist Intersectionality: Inquiry and Praxis
Ecofeminist Intersectionality as Critical Inquiry
Transversal Politics as Ecofeminist Intersectional Praxis
Conclusion
Bibliography
4 From Zero Gender to GAP: Foregrounding Gender in UNFCCC History
Phase 1: Zero Gender – 1992–2007
Phase Two: Mainstreaming Gender into the UNFCCC – 2007–2013
Phase 3: Gender Action Plan – 2014–2021
Conclusion
Bibliography
5 Political Strategies Mobilised by the Women and Gender Constituency
Rhetorical Strategies
Procedural Strategies
Conclusion
Bibliography
6 Lessons for Ecofeminist Intersectional Praxis
Lessons from the WGC for Intersectional Inquiry and Praxis
Towards an Ecofeminist Transversal Politics
Conclusion
Bibliography
7 Conclusion: New Directions for Ecofeminist Intersectional Praxis
Original Contributions
Coda
Bibliography
Appendix 1: Methodology
Index