Is climate change the problem? A feminist analysis of climate change discourses in Spain and Cataloni
dc.contributor.author
dc.date.accessioned
2025-02-12T13:36:04Z
dc.date.available
2025-02-12T13:36:04Z
dc.date.issued
2025-01
dc.identifier.issn
1462-9011
dc.identifier.uri
dc.description.abstract
The way climate change is framed and represented matters because it influences the type of actions and strategies promoted by climate-related policies. To understand how policies address climate change in the Spanish context, we performed an analysis of the discourse applying the “What’s the Problem Represented to be” Bacchi’s framework. We apply a feminist political ecology perspective, countering the dominant discourses around mitigation and adaptation to climate change, as well as identifying the silences on public policy at national (Spain) and regional (Catalonia) scales. Our results show that in both cases, the official policy discourse on climate change follows a techno-positivist and market driven narrative, mainly motivated by economic growth, not questioning much of the current economic model and without clearly addressing the responsibilities regarding the climate crisis and the resulting inequities associated to it. This representation presents climate change as a biophysical problem of increased concentration of greenhouse gases, which provides an opportunity for modernization and progress but at the same time, it is a threat to national security and a catalyst for existing vulnerabilities in the country. In contrast, the exploration of the silences of official public policy shows that climate change is represented as the visible consequence of a failed, patriarchal, and colonial system that needs to be solved under a social justice, human right and degrowth perspective. Alternative degrowth and ecofeminist discourses criticize the fallacy of greening the economic growth model and urge us to rethink the productive (and reproductive) current model, focusing on the sustainability of life as the central axis of transformation, “to live a life deserved to be lived”
dc.description.sponsorship
Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Elsevier
dc.format.mimetype
application/pdf
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
Elsevier
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Reproducció digital del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2024.103970
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Environmental Science & Policy, 2025, vol. 163, art. núm. 103970
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Articles publicats (D-G)
dc.rights
Attribution 4.0 International
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dc.subject
dc.title
Is climate change the problem? A feminist analysis of climate change discourses in Spain and Cataloni
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.rights.accessRights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.type.version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.identifier.doi
dc.identifier.idgrec
039484
dc.type.peerreviewed
peer-reviewed
dc.identifier.eissn
1873-6416
dc.description.ods
5. Igualdad de género
13. Acción por el clima