https://news.ku.edu/2016/02/18/book-argues-gender-parity-addressing-climate-change

Book argues for gender parity in addressing climate change

Fri, 02/26/2016

LAWRENCE — The world has long neglected to look at issues surrounding
global climate change through a gendered lens, a University of Kansas
professor argues in her new book.

"In all areas of climate change science, policy and solutions, women and
men should be equally represented at the table," said Joane Nagel,
university distinguished professor of sociology and author of "Gender and
Climate Change: Impacts, Science and Policy."

Nagel said her research for the book points to how more women than men die
in climate-related disasters around the world and how a male-centric
approach to climate change policy too often focuses on treating the
symptoms rather than addressing the root causes.

"For instance, geoengineering approaches focus on ways to reduce sunlight
or bury and sequester carbon. These kinds of solutions ignore the causes of
climate change, which is carbon dioxide production. We need to address the
sources of climate change as well as its consequences," Nagel said.

Strategies that emphasize quick fixes that allow continued high carbon
production tend to come from the types of professions that are imbalanced
along gender lines, such as mostly men working in energy or transportation
industries, she said.

"Women have responsibilities at home that make them sensitive to questions
of health and well-being. They're likely to think about inequality and
climate justice issues: How will people be affected? How will climate
change affect health? How will climate change affect living circumstances
of people? When they're responsible for children, women ask, how will it
affect future generations?" Nagel said. "Men might care about that, too,
but women are on the front lines as environmental consumers and caregivers."

The case studies in her book chronicle gender differences in climate change
effects and describe some of the ways masculinity has played out in various
institutions linked to climate change. She gives examples ranging from the
types of professions men and women typically enter to the militarized labs
from the Cold War era that have transitioned to measuring climate
conditions.

Nagel said her research makes the case for more gender parity in all areas
that address climate change, such as science, policy and solutions.
Recommendations include more equal research funding of male and female
climate scientists because they are likely to have different perspectives
on critical research questions, and gender parity in scientific regulatory
and global governance bodies, including at the United Nations Climate
Change Conference of the Parties meetings.

"When you have not only gender diversity, but also racial and ethnic
diversity, and you have a problem, you get quicker, better solutions,"
Nagel said. "And when you have organizations with women in leadership, you
tend to get a culture that is more inclusive and more egalitarian. Part of
that has to do with women being excluded from leadership positions for so
long."

She points to successes in Norway, which instituted mandated gender parity
on corporate boards of publicly owned corporations.

Nagel said if not addressed, the fallout from climate change could hit
women especially hard, particularly in poorer nations. For example, in the
1991 cyclone that struck Bangladesh and killed roughly 138,000 people,
researchers have found that roughly 90 percent of the dead were women and
children.

Nagel said in countries with little to no gender parity, especially poorer
ones, women can be more vulnerable to disasters, because they are often
sequestered at home, have less access to education and paid labor, and in
the case of Bangladesh, most women didn’t even know how to swim.

"Researchers have found that women were much more likely to be killed or
seriously injured in disasters for a variety or reasons," Nagel said. "This
really emphasizes the importance of understanding what is going on with
gender and climate change.

- See more at:
https://news.ku.edu/2016/02/18/book-argues-gender-parity-addressing-climate-change#sthash.U4RMBT6f.dpuf

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