Lancet Planet Health
Vol. 8, Issue 4, Pages 242-255
Date of Publication:
April 2024
Globally, more than 1 billion people with disabilities are disproportionately and differentially at risk from the climate crisis. Yet there is a notable absence of climate policy, programming, and research at the intersection of disability and climate change. Advancing climate justice urgently requires accelerated disability-inclusive climate action. We present pivotal research recommendations and guidance to advance disability-inclusive climate research and responses identified by a global interdisciplinary group of experts in disability, climate change, sustainable development, public health, environmental justice, humanitarianism, gender, Indigeneity, mental health, law, and planetary health. Climate-resilient development is a framework for enabling universal sustainable development. Advancing inclusive climate-resilient development requires a disability human rights approach that deepens understanding of how societal choices and actions-characterised by meaningful participation, inclusion, knowledge diversity in decision making, and co-design by and with people with disabilities and their representative organisations-build collective climate resilience benefiting disability communities and society at large while advancing planetary health.
Citations
Stein, Penelope J.S., Michael Ashley Stein, Nora Groce, Maria Kett, Emmanuel K. Akyeampong, Willliam P. Alford, Jayajit Chakraborty, Sheelagh Daniels-Mayes, Siri H. Eriksen, Anne Fracht, Luis Gallegos, Shaun Grech, Pratima Gurung, Asha Hans, Paul Harpur, Sébastien Jodoin, Janet E. Lord, Setareki Seru Macanawai, Charlotte V. McClain-Nhlapo, Benyam Dawit Mezmur, Rhonda J. Moore, Yolanda Muñoz, Vikram Patel, Phuong N. Pham, Gerard Quinn, Sarah A. Sadlier, Carmel Shachar, Matthew S. Smith and Lise Van Susteren. 2024. Advancing disability-inclusive climate research and action, climate justice, and climate-resilient development. Lancet Planet Health 8, no. 4 (April): 242-255.