
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


To call the effects of a fire, flood or cyclone these days a 'natural' disaster only tells part of the story, as climate change makes us realise that vulnerability to harm is often the result of factors that actually have little to do with weather events. Land theft, displacement, poverty and the legacies of colonial rule can all multiply climate harms, which means that climate justice is more than simply a matter of sustainable energy development or transitioning to a greener economy.
By ABC, ABC Australia4.5
191191 ratings
To call the effects of a fire, flood or cyclone these days a 'natural' disaster only tells part of the story, as climate change makes us realise that vulnerability to harm is often the result of factors that actually have little to do with weather events. Land theft, displacement, poverty and the legacies of colonial rule can all multiply climate harms, which means that climate justice is more than simply a matter of sustainable energy development or transitioning to a greener economy.

99 Listeners

64 Listeners

125 Listeners

89 Listeners

16 Listeners

43 Listeners

1,737 Listeners

785 Listeners

1,535 Listeners

752 Listeners

313 Listeners

133 Listeners

63 Listeners

64 Listeners

44 Listeners

467 Listeners

165 Listeners

1,080 Listeners

8 Listeners

194 Listeners

116 Listeners

234 Listeners

1,014 Listeners

55 Listeners