Australian Geographer,
Год журнала:
2023,
Номер
54(4), С. 433 - 447
Опубликована: Фев. 20, 2023
This
conceptual
article
argues
for
linking
the
concept
of
mobility
justice
to
an
analysis
climate
coloniality
and
then
seeks
build
on
recent
feminist,
Indigenous
Black
studies
ethics.
More
just,
equitable,
sustainable
futures
call
more
than
decarbonization
or
low
carbon
transitions.
Situating
crisis
within
deeper
political
ecologies
colonialism,
extractivism,
racial
capitalism,
argument
centers
relational
co-becoming,
anti-extractivism,
mobile
commoning
as
crucial
ethics
that
are
inclusive
Afro-descendent
cosmologies,
well
respectful
non-human
mobilities
webs
life.
Finally,
it
turns
toward
decolonial,
Black,
ontologies
transmotion
a
needed
step
beyond
existing
global
regimes
intentional
decolonizing
extractive
have
led
contemporary
crisis.
The
conclusion
joins
others
in
advocating
care
social
science
approaches
can
coalesce
growing
conversations
these
issues
across
North
America,
Latin
Australia,
Oceania,
Africa
beyond.
Oxford University Press eBooks,
Год журнала:
2025,
Номер
unknown
Опубликована: Март 20, 2025
Abstract
This
chapter
examines
the
collective
nature
of
mobility
responses
generated
in
response
to
climate
change.
Whether
impacted
populations
are
forcibly
displaced,
relocate
preserve
livelihoods,
or
strive
remain
place,
myriad
social,
economic,
political,
and
biophysical
changes
that
unfold
a
changing
often
induce
action
geared
toward
ameliorating
challenges
relocation
preserving
place-based
social
cultural
ties.
Climate-related
mobilities
difficult
categorize
within
existing
migration
classificatory
systems.
further
complicates
prospects
for
vulnerable
obtain
support,
protection,
capacity
exercise
self-determination
deciding
if,
when,
how
move
as
effects
change
become
more
pronounced.
takes
global
perspective
with
special
attention
cases
Latin
America,
Southeast
Asia,
Africa,
well
Global
North.
Australian Geographer,
Год журнала:
2023,
Номер
54(4), С. 433 - 447
Опубликована: Фев. 20, 2023
This
conceptual
article
argues
for
linking
the
concept
of
mobility
justice
to
an
analysis
climate
coloniality
and
then
seeks
build
on
recent
feminist,
Indigenous
Black
studies
ethics.
More
just,
equitable,
sustainable
futures
call
more
than
decarbonization
or
low
carbon
transitions.
Situating
crisis
within
deeper
political
ecologies
colonialism,
extractivism,
racial
capitalism,
argument
centers
relational
co-becoming,
anti-extractivism,
mobile
commoning
as
crucial
ethics
that
are
inclusive
Afro-descendent
cosmologies,
well
respectful
non-human
mobilities
webs
life.
Finally,
it
turns
toward
decolonial,
Black,
ontologies
transmotion
a
needed
step
beyond
existing
global
regimes
intentional
decolonizing
extractive
have
led
contemporary
crisis.
The
conclusion
joins
others
in
advocating
care
social
science
approaches
can
coalesce
growing
conversations
these
issues
across
North
America,
Latin
Australia,
Oceania,
Africa
beyond.