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Technology, Gender, and Climate Change: A Feminist Examination of Climate Technologies

doi: 10.3390/soc8040109
In this article, I examine the subject of justice as it relates to gender and climate change by focusing on two specific strategies, namely, the geoengineering strategy of ocean fertilization, and renewable energy as a means of mitigation (where mitigation is understood as the adoption of technologies and practices that aim to slow the rise of greenhouse gas emissions). My overarching argument is that iron fertilization geoengineering is not consistent with the feminist values of justice embedded in feminist standpoint theory and feminist contextual empiricism. Alternative mitigation strategies, on the other hand, go much further in meeting these objectives and virtues.
- University of Newcastle Australia Australia
- Newcastle University United Kingdom
- University of Newcastle Australia Australia
feminism, H1-99, Social sciences (General), climate change, geoengineering, gender, environment, standpoint
feminism, H1-99, Social sciences (General), climate change, geoengineering, gender, environment, standpoint
