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Climate Crises and the Creation of ‘Undeserving’ Victims

journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-22, 03:54 authored by Elizabeth StanleyElizabeth Stanley
This paper explores how advanced liberal democracies respond to climate migrants in ways that reflect colonial logics and practices. With a focus on the Pacific, it reflects on three constructions of climate crisis victims. First, as savages—those incapable of adapting or thriving under catastrophic environmental threats and who need to be saved by ‘the West’. Secondly, as threats—the hordes who will threaten white civilization and who must be sorted, excluded, detained and deported. Thirdly, as ‘non-ideal’ victims—those undeserving of full legal protections but who may survive under hostile conditions in receiving states. These political and policy responses create systemic harms and injustice for those who struggle under or must flee environmental degradation, and they function to ensure that those most to blame for climate crises are prioritized as having least responsibility to take action. The paper concludes with consideration of socially just responses to those most affected from climate harms.

History

Preferred citation

Stanley, E. (n.d.). Climate Crises and the Creation of ‘Undeserving’ Victims. Social Sciences, 10(4), 144-144. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040144

Journal title

Social Sciences

Volume

10

Issue

4

Pagination

144-144

Publisher

MDPI AG

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2021-04-19

eISSN

2076-0760

Language

en

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