Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics: An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics : An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden). / De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo; de Moor, Joost; Dabaieh, Marwa.

I: Cities, Bind 130, 103848, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

De Rosa, SP, de Moor, J & Dabaieh, M 2022, 'Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics: An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden)', Cities, bind 130, 103848. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848

APA

De Rosa, S. P., de Moor, J., & Dabaieh, M. (2022). Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics: An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden). Cities, 130, [103848]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848

Vancouver

De Rosa SP, de Moor J, Dabaieh M. Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics: An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden). Cities. 2022;130. 103848. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848

Author

De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo ; de Moor, Joost ; Dabaieh, Marwa. / Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics : An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden). I: Cities. 2022 ; Bind 130.

Bibtex

@article{f1d4b61156534c818fc76913de3d3966,
title = "Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics: An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malm{\"o} (Sweden)",
abstract = "Climate change adaptation is rising on the agenda of cities. However, critics have argued that urban adaptation efforts largely focus on preserving economic growth while overlooking the root causes of unequal vulnerability to climate impacts, giving rise to climate injustices. In response, literature on transformational adaptation has politicized these issues but it has remained largely conceptual, particularly in relation to the question of which actors can define and advance transformative approaches. Furthermore, existing empirical studies focus on positive cases while ignoring why these issues more commonly are not politicized. In this article, we add empirical rigour to these debates through an investigation into Malm{\"o}'s climate politics. We analyse what enables or inhibits the role of three political outsiders – disadvantaged communities, climate movements and social justice activists – in politicizing urban climate adaptation. We find that, while the most vulnerable social groups struggle with climatic impacts and experience difficulties in politicizing these issues, climate movements remain focused on climate mitigation and largely ignore local adaptation. In turn, we highlight the untapped capacity of social justice activism to act as social infrastructure for adaptation. Our findings suggest that alliances between the victims of adaptation injustices and local activist groups could support the politicization of those grievances by responding to emerging needs and by building policy-oriented pressure for transformational adaptation. However, we identify several factors that limit this potential, thereby contributing to an understanding of why social movements sometimes do not live up to their transformational potential.",
keywords = "climate change, activism, Malm{\"o}, vulnerability, adaptation",
author = "{De Rosa}, {Salvatore Paolo} and {de Moor}, Joost and Marwa Dabaieh",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848",
language = "English",
volume = "130",
journal = "Cities",
issn = "0264-2751",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vulnerability and activism in urban climate politics

T2 - An actor-centered approach to transformational adaptation in Malmö (Sweden)

AU - De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo

AU - de Moor, Joost

AU - Dabaieh, Marwa

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Climate change adaptation is rising on the agenda of cities. However, critics have argued that urban adaptation efforts largely focus on preserving economic growth while overlooking the root causes of unequal vulnerability to climate impacts, giving rise to climate injustices. In response, literature on transformational adaptation has politicized these issues but it has remained largely conceptual, particularly in relation to the question of which actors can define and advance transformative approaches. Furthermore, existing empirical studies focus on positive cases while ignoring why these issues more commonly are not politicized. In this article, we add empirical rigour to these debates through an investigation into Malmö's climate politics. We analyse what enables or inhibits the role of three political outsiders – disadvantaged communities, climate movements and social justice activists – in politicizing urban climate adaptation. We find that, while the most vulnerable social groups struggle with climatic impacts and experience difficulties in politicizing these issues, climate movements remain focused on climate mitigation and largely ignore local adaptation. In turn, we highlight the untapped capacity of social justice activism to act as social infrastructure for adaptation. Our findings suggest that alliances between the victims of adaptation injustices and local activist groups could support the politicization of those grievances by responding to emerging needs and by building policy-oriented pressure for transformational adaptation. However, we identify several factors that limit this potential, thereby contributing to an understanding of why social movements sometimes do not live up to their transformational potential.

AB - Climate change adaptation is rising on the agenda of cities. However, critics have argued that urban adaptation efforts largely focus on preserving economic growth while overlooking the root causes of unequal vulnerability to climate impacts, giving rise to climate injustices. In response, literature on transformational adaptation has politicized these issues but it has remained largely conceptual, particularly in relation to the question of which actors can define and advance transformative approaches. Furthermore, existing empirical studies focus on positive cases while ignoring why these issues more commonly are not politicized. In this article, we add empirical rigour to these debates through an investigation into Malmö's climate politics. We analyse what enables or inhibits the role of three political outsiders – disadvantaged communities, climate movements and social justice activists – in politicizing urban climate adaptation. We find that, while the most vulnerable social groups struggle with climatic impacts and experience difficulties in politicizing these issues, climate movements remain focused on climate mitigation and largely ignore local adaptation. In turn, we highlight the untapped capacity of social justice activism to act as social infrastructure for adaptation. Our findings suggest that alliances between the victims of adaptation injustices and local activist groups could support the politicization of those grievances by responding to emerging needs and by building policy-oriented pressure for transformational adaptation. However, we identify several factors that limit this potential, thereby contributing to an understanding of why social movements sometimes do not live up to their transformational potential.

KW - climate change

KW - activism

KW - Malmö

KW - vulnerability

KW - adaptation

U2 - 10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848

DO - 10.1016/j.cities.2022.103848

M3 - Journal article

VL - 130

JO - Cities

JF - Cities

SN - 0264-2751

M1 - 103848

ER -

ID: 362742107