36
Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside Marjorie Griffin Cohen ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Adger, W.N., & Kelly, P. (1999). Social vulnerability to climate change and the architecture of entitlements. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change. 4(3-4), 253-66. Agrawal, A. (2005). Environmentality: Technologies of Government in the Making of Subjects. Durham: Duke University. Agarwal, B. (2001). Participatory Exclusions, Community Forestry, and Gender: An Analysis for South Asia and a Conceptual Framework. World Development. 29(10), 1623-1648. Agarwal, B. (2000). Conceptualizing Environmental Collective Action: Why Gender Matters. Cambridge Journal of Economics. 24(3), 283-310. Agarwal, B. (1998). Environmental management, equity and ecofeminism: debating India’s experience. Journal of Peasant Studies. 25(4), 55-95. Agarwal, B. (1997). Environmental action, gender equality and women’s participation. Development and Change. 28(1), 1-44. Agarwal, B. (1997). Gender, Environment, and poverty links: regional variations and temporal shifts in rural India, 1971-1991. World Development. 25(1), 23-51. Agarwal, B. (1997). The gender and environment debate: lessons from India. In Visvanathan, N. et al., eds. The Women, Gender, and Development Reader. London: Zed Books.

Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    4

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)

Heather Whiteside Marjorie Griffin Cohen

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Adger, W.N., & Kelly, P. (1999). Social vulnerability to climate change and the architecture

of entitlements. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change. 4(3-4), 253-66.

Agrawal, A. (2005). Environmentality: Technologies of Government in the Making of

Subjects. Durham: Duke University.

Agarwal, B. (2001). Participatory Exclusions, Community Forestry, and Gender: An

Analysis for South Asia and a Conceptual Framework. World Development. 29(10),

1623-1648.

Agarwal, B. (2000). Conceptualizing Environmental Collective Action: Why Gender

Matters. Cambridge Journal of Economics. 24(3), 283-310.

Agarwal, B. (1998). Environmental management, equity and ecofeminism: debating India’s

experience. Journal of Peasant Studies. 25(4), 55-95.

Agarwal, B. (1997). Environmental action, gender equality and women’s participation.

Development and Change. 28(1), 1-44.

Agarwal, B. (1997). Gender, Environment, and poverty links: regional variations and

temporal shifts in rural India, 1971-1991. World Development. 25(1), 23-51.

Agarwal, B. (1997). The gender and environment debate: lessons from India. In

Visvanathan, N. et al., eds. The Women, Gender, and Development Reader. London: Zed

Books.

Page 2: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Agarwal, B. (1992). Gender Relations and Food Security: coping with seasonality, drought,

and famine in South Asia. In Feldman, S., & Beneria, L., eds. Unequal Burden:

economic crises, persistent poverty, and women’s work. Colorado: Westview Press.

Agarwal, B. (1992). The Gender and Environment Debate: Lessons from India. Feminist

Studies. 1, 119-158.

Aguilar, L. (2009). Women and Climate Change: Vulnerabilities and Adaptive Capacities.

In State of the World: Climate Connections. 26th edition. Washington: Worldwatch

Institute. 59-62. http://www.worldwatch.org/files/pdf/SOW09_CC_women.pdf

Aguilar, L. (2006). Climate Change and Disaster Mitigation: Gender Makes the

Difference. World Conservation Union: International Union for the Conservation of

Nature. http://www.iucn.org Aguilar, L, A. Araujo, & A. Quesada-Aguilar. (2007).

Gender and Climate Change. IUCN. http://www.gender-

climate.org/pdfs/FactsheetClimateChange.pdf

Aguilar, L, A. Araujo, & A. Quesada-Aguilar. (2007). Reforestation, Afforestation,

Deforestation, Climate Change and Gender. IUCN. http://www.gender-

climate.org/pdfs/FactsheetForestry.pdf

Ahmed, S. (2006). Gender, vulnerability, and disasters: key concerns for policy and

practice. Disaster and Development. 1(1), 165-77.

Ahmed, S. (2005). Why is gender equity a concern for water management? In Ahmed, S.,

ed. Flowing Upstream: empowering women through water management initiatives in

India. Ahmedabad: Centre for Environmental Education and New Delhi: Foundation

Books.

Ahmed, S., & Fajber, E. (2009). Engendering adaptation to climate variability in Gujarat,

India. Gender & Development. 17(1), 33-50.

Page 3: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Alber, G. (2009). The women and gender constituency in the climate negotiations. Women

in Action. 2, 61-64.

Alber, G., & Rohr, U. (2006). Climate protection – what’s gender got to do with it? Women

& Environments International Magazine. 70, 17-20.

Anderson, C. L. (2002). Gender matters: implications for climate variability and climate

change for disaster management in the Pacific Islands. Intercoast. Winter.

http://www.crc.uri.edu/download/2002_41_CRC_GenderPopulationEnvironment.pdf

Anderson, D. (2009). Enduring drought then coping with climate change: Lived experience

and local resolve in rural mental health. Rural Society. 19(4), 340-352.

Alam, K., Fatema, N. & Ahmed, W.B. (2008). Gender, Climate Change and Human Security

in Bangladesh. Dhaka: Action Aid. http://www.wedo.org/wp-

content/uploads/bangladesh-case-study.pdf

Araujo, A., & Quesada-Aguilar, A. (2007). Gender Equality and Adaptation. IUCN and

WEDO.

www.genderandenvironment.org/admin/admin_biblioteca/documentos/FactsheetAdap

tation.org

Arcury, T.A., Scollay, S., & Johnson, T.P. (1987). Sex differences in environmental concern

and knowledge. Sex Roles. 16(9-10), 463-472.

Ariyabandu, M.M & Wickramasinghe, M. (2003). Gender Dimensions in Disaster

Management: a guide for South Asia. Colombo: Intermediate Technology Development

Group.

Arthurs, J., & Zacharias, U. (2008). Environment, media, and new gender politics:

Introduction [global warming debate]. Feminist Media Studies. 8(3), 317-318.

Page 4: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Awumbila, M., & Henshall Momsen, J. (1995). Gender and the Environment. Global

Environmental Change. 5(4), 337-346.

Banerjee, D. & Mayerfeld Bell, M. (2007). Ecogender: locating gender in the environmental

social sciences. Society and Natural Resources. 20(1), 3-19.

Baumol, W., & Oates, W.E. (1988). The Theory of Environmental Policy. Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press.

Beaumier, MC, & JD Ford. (2010). Food insecurity among Inuit women exacerbated by

socioeconomic stresses and climate change. Canadian Journal of Public Health. 101(3),

196-201.

Bernabe, D., & Penunia, E. (2009). Gender links agriculture and climate change. Women in

Action. 2, 21-24.

Biehl, J. (1991). Rethinking ecofeminist politics. Boston: South End Press.

Blocker, T.J, & Eckberg, D.L. (1997). Gender and Environmentalism. Social Science

Quarterly. 78. 841-858.

Blocker, T.J, & Eckberg, D.L. (1989). Environmental Issues as Women’s Issues. Social

Science Quarterly. 70. 586-593.

Bohle, H.G., Downing, T.E., & Watts, M.J. (1994). Climate change and social vulnerability.

Global Environmental Change. 4(1), 37-48.

Bolin, R., Jackson, M., & Crist, A. (1998). Gender inequality, vulnerability and disaster:

issues in theory and research. In Enarson, E. & Morrow, B.H., eds. The Gendered

Terrain of Disaster: through women’s eyes. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publications.

Page 5: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Bond, P., & Dada, R. (2007). A death in Durban: Capitalist patriarchy, global warming

gimmickry and our responsibility for rubbish. Agenda: Empowering Women for

Gender Equity. 73, 46-56.

Bord, R. J., & O'Connor, R. E. (1997). The gender gap in environmental attitudes: The

case of perceived vulnerability to risk. Social Science Quarterly. 78(4), 830-840.

Boyd, E. (2002). The noel kempff project in Bolivia: Gender, power, and decision-making

in climate mitigation. Gender and Development. 10(2), 70-77.

Bradshaw, S. (2004). Socio-economic Impacts of Natural Disasters: a gender analysis. United

Nations Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA). Serie Manuales 32. United

Nations Publication: Santiago. 7-58.

http://www.eclac.org/publicaciones/xml/3/15433/lcl2128i.pdf

Braidotti, R., Charkiewicz, E., Hausler, & Wieringa, S. (1994). Women, the Environment,

and Sustainable Development. London: Zed.

Brody, A., Demetriades, J., & Esplen, E. (2008). Gender and Climate Change: mapping the

linkages: a scoping study on knowledge and gaps. BRIDEG, IDS.

http://www.bridge.ids.ac.uk/reports/Climate_Change_DFID.pdf

Brody, S. D., Zahran, S., Vedlitz, A., & Grover, H. (2008). Examining the relationship

between physical vulnerability and public perceptions of global climate change in the

United States. Environment and Behavior. 41. January. 72-95.

Bronson, D. (2009). Geoengineering: A gender issue? Women in Action. 2, 85-89.

Brooks, N. (2003). Vulnerability, risk and adaptation: a conceptual framework. Tyndall

Centre for Climate Change Research, Working Paper No. 40. University of East

Anglia, Norwich, UK.

Page 6: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Brownhill, L. S. (2007). Gendered struggles for the commons: Food sovereignty, tree-

planting and climate change. Women & Environments International Magazine. 74, 34-

37.

Brundtland, G. H. (2007). Keynote address: Levers of global security: Examining how a

changing climate impacts women September 21 http://www.wedo.org/wp-

content/uploads/brundtland-climate-change-speech.pdf

Buckingham, S, & Kulcur, R. (2009). Gendered Geographies of Environmental Justice.

Antipode. 41(4), 659-683.

Buckingham-Hatfield, S. (2000). Gender and Environment. London: Routledge.

Buechler, S. (2009). Gender, water, and climate change in Sonora, Mexico: Implications for

policies and programmes on agricultural income-generation. Gender & Development.

17(1), 51-66.

Canadian International Development Agency. (CIDA). (n.d.) Gender Equality and Climate

Change: Why consider gender equality when taking action on climate change? Canada:

CIDA. 1-3 http://www.acdi-

cida.gc.ca/INET/IMAGES.NSF/vLUImages/Climate%20change3/$file/Gender-2.pdf

Cannon, T. (2002). Gender and climate hazards in Bangladesh. Gender and Development.

10(2), 45-50.

Cappello, S., & Harcourt, W. (2009). Gender and climate justice. International Journal of

Green Economics. 3(3-4), 343-350.

Casey, L., & Paolisso, M. (1996). Household response to soil degradation: A case study of

gender and demographic dynamics in Honduras. International Center for Research on

Page 7: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Women. http://www.ncrw.org/member-organizations/international-center-research-

women

Cecelski, E. (1995). From Rio to Beijing: Engendering the energy debate. Energy Policy.

23(6), 561-575.

Cecelski, E. (1987). Energy and rural women’s work: crisis, response and policy

alternatives. International Labour Review. 126(1), 41-64.

Chalifour, N. (2010). A Feminist Perspective on Carbon Taxes. Canadian Journal of

Women and the Law. 21(2), 169-212.

Chalifour, N, ed. (2008). Critical Issues in Environmental Taxation. Volume 5. Oxford:

Oxford University Press.

Chen, D., Ma, X., Mu, H., & Li, P. (2010). “The inequality of natural resources

consumption and its relationship with the social development level based on the

ecological footprint and the HDI.” Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy &

Management. 12(1), 69-86.

Clancy, J. & Rohr, U. (2003). Gender and Energy: is there a northern perspective? Energy

for Sustainable Development. 7(3), 44-49.

Clancy, J., Ummar, F., Shakya, I., & Kelkar, G. (2007). Appropriate gender-analysis for

unpacking the gender-energy-poverty nexus. Gender and Development. 15(2), 241-257.

Collins, A., & Fairchild, R. (2007). Sustainable food consumption at a sub-national level:

An ecological footprint, nutritional and economic analysis. Journal of Environmental

Policy & Planning, 9(1), 5-30.

Cooke, L. (2010). Resources. Gender & Development. 18(1), 125-136.

Cuomo, C. (1994). Ecofeminism, deep ecology and human population. In Warren, K.J., ed.

Ecological Feminism. London: Routeldge.

Page 8: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Cutter, S. L. (1995). The forgotten casualties: women, children, and environmental change.

Global Environmental Change. 5(3), 181-194.

Dankelman, I., ed. (2010). Gender and climate change: an introduction. Oxford: Earthscan.

Dankelman, I. (2002). Climate change: Learning from gender analysis and women's

experiences of organizing for sustainable development. Gender and Development. 10(2),

21-29.

Dankelman, I., Alam, K., Ahmed, W. B., Gueye, Y. D., Fatema, N., & Mensah-Kutin, R.

(2008). Gender, Climate Change and Human Security: lessons from Bangladesh, Ghana,

and Senegal. WEDO with ABANTU for Development in Ghana, ActionAid Bangladesh

and ENDA Senegal. http://www.wedo.org/wp-content/uploads/hsn-study-final-may-20-

2008.pdf

Dankelman, I., Alam, K., Ahmed, W. B., Gueye, Y. D., Fatema, N., & Mensah-Kutin, R.

(2008). What it means for women. Forced Migration Review. 31, 56-56.

http://www.fmreview.org/FMRpdfs/FMR31/56.pdf

Davidson, D.J, & Freudenburg, W.R. (1996). Gender and environmental risk concerns.

Environment and Behavior. 28(3), 302-339.

Davion, V. (2009). Feminist perspectives on global warming, genocide, and card's theory of

evil. Hypatia. 24(1), 160-177.

Dennison, C.E. (2003). From Beijing to Kyoto: gendering the international climate change

negotiation process. Draft Paper, ISYP Conference ‘Advancing Human Security’.

Halifax: NS, July.

Denton, F. (2004). Gender and Climate Change: Giving the “Latecomer” a Head Start.

Sussex, UK: Institute of Development Studies. http://www.ids.ac.uk/go/publications

Denton, F. (2002). Climate change vulnerability, impacts, and adaptation: Why does

gender matter? Gender and Development. 10(2), 10-20.

Page 9: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Denton, F. (2001). Climate Change, Gender and Poverty – academic babble or realpolitik?

Bulletin Africain: Point de Vue. 14. Dakar: RABEDE.

http://www.generoyambiente.org/arcangel2/documentos/107.pdf

Denton, F. (2000). Gender Impact of Climate Change: a human security dimension.

Energia News. 3(3), 13-14.

DiChiro, G. (2008). Living environmentalisms: Coalition politics, social reproduction, and

environmental justice. Environmental Politics. 17(2), 276-298.

Dictaan-Ban-oa, E. P. (2009). Perishing past and pride: Indigenous women and climate

change. Women in Action. 2, 49-52.

Dietz, T., Kalof, L, & Stern, P. (2002). Gender, Values, and Environmentalism. Social

Science Quarterly. 83(1), 353-364.

Dietz, T., Rosa, E. A., & York, R. (2007). Driving the human ecological footprint. Frontiers

in Ecology & the Environment, 5(1), 13-18.

D'Ippoliti, D., Michelozzi, P., Marino, C., De'Donato, F., Menne, B., Katsouyanni, K.,

Kirchmayer, U., Analitis, A., Medina-Ramon, M., Paldy, A., Atkinson, R., Kovats, S.,

Bisanti, L., Schneider, A., Lefranc, A., Iniguez, C., & Perucci, C.A. (2010). The impact

of heat waves on mortality in 9 European cities: Results from the EuroHEAT project.

Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source. 9, 37-45.

Dokos, T., Afifi, T., Bogardi, J., Dankelman, I., Dun, O., Goodman, D.L., Huq, S., Iltus, S.,

Pearl, R., Pettengell, C., Schmidl, Sl., Stal, M., Warner, K., & Xenarios, S. (2008).

Climate Change: Addressing the Impact on Human Security. Hellenic Foundation for

European and Foreign Policy and Hellenic Ministry of Foreign Affairs. November.

http://www.eliamep.gr/en/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/climate-change.pdf

Draper, D., & Mitchell, B. (2001). Environmental justice considerations in Canada.

Canadian Geographer. 45(1), 93-8.

Douma, W., van den Homberg, H., & Wieberdink, A. (1994). The Politics of Research on

Gender, Environment, and Development. In Harcourt, W., ed. Feminist Perspectives on

Sustainable Development. New York: Zed Books, 176-186.

Page 10: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Duddy, J. (2004). Is climate change a gender issue? AWID.

http://www.generoyambiente.org/arcangel2/documentos/453.pdf

Duncan, K. (2007). Global climate change and women's health. Women & Environments

International Magazine. 74, 10-11.

Dunlap, R.E. & McCright, A.M. (2008). A Widening Gap. Environment. 50(5), September,

26-35.

Dwivedi, O.P., Kyba, J.P., & Stoett, P. (2001). Gender, Resources, and the Environment. In

Sustainable Development and Canada. Peterborough: Broadview Press.

http://site.ebrary.com.proxy.lib.sfu.ca/lib/sfu/docDetail.action?docID=10175794

Elliot, L. (2004). The Global Politics of the Environment. 2nd ed. London: Macmillan.

Elliott, L. (1996). Women, Gender, Feminism, and the Environment. In Turpin, J.E.,

Lorentzen, L.A. The Gendered New World Order: militarism, development, and the

environment. NY: Routledge.

Enarson, E. (2000). Gender and Natural Disasters. September. Geneva: ILO.

http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_emp/---emp_ent/---

ifp_crisis/documents/publication/wcms_116391.pdf

Enarson, E. & Fordham, M. (2001). From women’s needs to women’s rights in disasters.

Environmental Hazards. 3, 133-136.

ENERGIA, Global Forest Coalition, WOCAN and WECF. (2011). A gender perspective on

the “green economy”: equitable, healthy and decent jobs and livelihoods. Women’s

major group proposition paper in preparation of the “Rio+20” United Nations

Page 11: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Conference on Sustainable Development 2012. February 20, 2011.

http://www.unep.org/civil-

society/Portals/59/Documents/12_GMGSF/docs_and_presentations/Additional_messag

es/gender_perspective_on_the_green_economy.pdf

Eyzaguirre, J. (2007). Climate change and Canada. Women & Environments International

Magazine. 74, 18-20.

Fleischli, S., Holzmann, N., & Reimann, C. (2007). Gender, Environment, Conflict. Special

Issue Newsletter. Environment Conflict and Cooperation. May. http://www.ecc-

platform.org/images/stories/newsletter/eccgender07.pdf

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (n.d.) Gender: the missing component of the

response to climate change. http://www.fao.org/docrep/010/i0170e/i0170e00.htm

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (n.d.) People-Centered Climate Change

Adaptation: integrating gender issues. 1-2.

ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/010/a1395e/a1395e00.pdf

Fordham, M. (1999). The intersection of gender and social class in disaster: balancing

resilience and vulnerability. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters.

17(1), 15-36.

Fothergill, A. (1998). The neglect of gender in disaster work: an overview of the literature.

In Enarson, E., & Morrow, B.H., eds. The Gendered Terrain of Disaster. Westport CT:

Greenwood Publications.

Fussel, H.M. (2007). Vulnerability: a generally applicable conceptual framework for

climate change research. Global Environmental Change. 17(2), 155-67.

Page 12: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

GenderCC Network. (2007). Gender and Climate Change Network, Women for Climate

Justice Position Paper. Presented at UNFCCC COP 13. Bali, Indonesia. December.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/gender-

cc-forest-final.pdf

GenderCC Network-Women for Climate Justice. (2007). Gender: Missing Links in

Financing Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation – Position Paper prepared for

UNFCCC COP 13, Bali, Indonesia.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/gender_

cc_financing_positionpaper_bali_final.pdf

Gupta, K. S. (n.d.) Gender and International Environmental Negotiations – How Far and

How Much More?

http://www.oas.org/dsd/Toolkit/Documentos/ModuleV/Gupta%20Reading.pdf

Gupta, K.S., & Gupta, M. (2003). The woes of women in drought: social, environmental,

and economic impacts. Women and Environments International. 60/61, Fall, 12-13.

Gaard, G. (1998). Ecological politics: ecofeminists and the greens. Philadelphia: Temple

University Press.

Goldstein, J. (2006). Ecofeminism in theory and praxis. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism. 17(4),

96-192.

Gurung, J.D., Mwanundu, S, Lubbock, A., Hartl, M. & Firmian, I. (2006). Gender and

Desertification: expanding roles for women to restore drylands. International Fund for

Agricultural Development. http://www.ifad.org/pub/gender/desert/gender_desert.pdf

Haigh, C., & Valley, B. (2010). Gender and the Climate Change Agenda. The Impacts of

Climate Change on Women and Public Policy. Women’s Environmental Network.

http://www.wen.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/Gender-and-the-climate-change-agenda-

21.pdf

Page 13: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Hannan, C. (2002). Mainstreaming gender perspectives in environmental management and

mitigation of natural disasters. 46th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women.

United Nations. http://www.un.org/womenwatch/osagi/pdf/presnat%20disaster.PDF

Hayden, A., & Shandra, J. M. (2009). Hours of work and the ecological footprint of

nations: An exploratory analysis. Local Environment, 14(6), 575-600.

Hayes, B.C. (2001). Gender, Scientific Knowledge, and Attitudes Toward the Environment.

Political Research Quarterly. 54(3). 657-671.

Hartmann, B. (2006). Gender Militarism and Climate Change. ZNet Commentary. April 10.

WRM Bulletin Issue 107, July.

http://www.wrm.org.uy/bulletin/107/Gender_Climate.html

Hemmati, M. (2008). Gender Perspectives on Climate Change. Background Paper to the

Interactive Expert Panel at the UN Commission on the Status of Women, 52nd session,

28 February 2008.

http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/csw52/panels/climatechangepanel/M.Hemma

ti%20Presentation%20Climate%20Change.pdf

Hemmati, M. (2005). Gender & Climate Change in the North: Issues, Entry Points and

Strategies for the Post-2012 Process and Beyond. Berlin: Genanet /Focal Point Gender

Justice and Sustainability.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/Gender

_Post-Kyoto.pdf

Hemmati, M & Gardiner, R. (2002). Gender and Sustainable Development. World Summit

Briefing Paper No. 10. Berlin/London.

http://www.worldsummit2002.org/publications/wspaper10.pdf

Hemmati, M., & Rohr, U. (2009). Engendering the climate-change negotiations:

Experiences, challenges, and steps forward. Gender and Development. 17(1), 19-32.

Page 14: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Hemmati, M., & Rohr, U. (2007). A huge challenge and a narrow discourse: Ain't no space

for gender in climate change policy? Women & Environments International Magazine.

74, 5-9.

Hunter, L, Hatch, A., and Johnson, A. (2004). Cross-national gender variation in

environmental behaviours. Social Science Quarterly. 85(3), 677-694.

Huysentruyt, M.E., & Francis, J. (2003). Position Paper on Climate Change, Water and

Gender. Gender and Water Alliance and International Water and Sanitation Centre.

December-January. http://www.gender-

climate.org/pdfs/GWA_Gender,_Water_and_Climate_Change.pdf

Hynes, H. P., (1999). “Consumption: North American perspectives.” In Silliman, J., &

King, Y. Dangerous Intersections: Feminist Perspectives on Population, Environment, &

Development, Cambridge: South End press; 189-201.

Intemann, K. (2010). Whose Benefits? Which Costs? How Climate Change Research Could

Benefit from Feminist Research Principles. Paper presented at the annual meeting of

the 4S Annual Meeting. Komaba I Campus, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.

August, 25.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (2007). Summary for Policymakers.

In Parry, M.L., Canziani, O.F., Palutikof, J.P., van der Linden, P.J., & Hanson, C.E.,

eds. Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of

Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on

Climate Change, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 7-22.

http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg2/ar4-wg2-spm.pdf

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (2001). Climate Change 2001:

Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Geneva: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate

Change.

Page 15: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/tar/wg2/pdf/wg2TARfrontmatter.pdf

International Labour Organization (ILO). (2011). Promoting work in a green economy: ILO

background note to ‘Towards a green economy: pathways to sustainable development and

poverty eradication’ UNEP, 2011. Geneva: International Labour Organization.

http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_emp/---

emp_ent/documents/publication/wcms_152065.pdf

International Labour Organization (ILO). (2009). Gender equality at the heart of decent

work. International Labour Conference, 98th Session. Report VI. Geneva: International

Labour Organization.

http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@ed_norm/@relconf/documents/meetingdoc

ument/wcms_105119.pdf

International Labour Organization (ILO). (2009). Green jobs: improving the climate for

gender equality too! Geneva: International Labour Organization.

http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---dgreports/---

gender/documents/publication/wcms_101505.pdf

Isla, A. (2007). The Kyoto Protocol. Women & Environments International Magazine. 74/75,

Spring/Summer, 21-24.

Izrael, Y.A., Semenov, S.M., Anisimov, O.A., Anokhin, Y.A., Velichko, A.A., Revich, B.A.,

& Shiklomanov, I.A. (2007). The fourth assessment report of the intergovernmental

panel on climate change: working group II contribution. Russian Meteorology and

Hydrology. 32(9), 551-556.

Page 16: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Jackson, C. (1997). Gender Analysis of Environmental Change in Developing Countries.

Overseas Development Group, East Anglia University (UEA) School of Development

Studies. January.

Jackson, C. (1994). Gender Analysis and Environmentalisms. In Redclift, M., & Benton, T.

Social Theory and the Global Environment. London: Routledge.

Jackson, C. (1993). Women/nature or gender/history? A critique of ecofeminist

‘development’. Journal of Peasant Studies. 20(3), 389-419.

Janes, C. R. (2010). Failed development and vulnerability to climate change in central Asia:

Implications for food security and health. Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health / Asia-

Pacific Academic Consortium for Public Health. 22(3, suppl.), 236S-245S.

Jewett, S. (2000). Mothering earth? Gender and environmental protection in the

Jharkhand, India. Journal of Peasant Studies. 27(2), 94-131.

Joekes, S, Green, C., & Leach, M. (1997). Integrating Gender Into Environmental Research

and Policy. Working Paper, Institute of Development Studies, International Water

Sanitation Centre.

Johnsson-Latham, G. (2007). A study in gender equality as a prerequisite for sustainable

development. What we know about the extent to which women globally live in a more

sustainable way than men, leave a smaller ecological footprint and cause less climate

change. Report to the Environment Advisory Council, Ministry of the Environment,

Sweden.

Johnsson-Latham, G. (2006). Initial study of lifestyles, consumption patterns, sustainable

development and gender: Do women leave a smaller ecological footprint than men?

Report from the Swedish Ministry of Sustainable Development. Stockholm, April.

http://www.sweden.gov.se/content/1/c6/06/72/73/1bd9aa9c.pdf

Jones, R. (2009). A Review of ‘Gender and Climate Change: Mapping the Linkages. 12(9).

Page 17: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

http://www.awid.org/eng/Issues-and-Analysis/Library/A-review-of-Gender-and-

Climate-Change-Mapping-the-Linkages

Kellstedt, P.M, Zahran, S., & Vedlitz, A. (2008). Personal Efficacy, the Information

Environment, and Attitudes Toward Global Warming and Climate Change in the

USA. Risk Analysis. 28(1), 113-126.

Kennet. M. (2009). The costs of women’s unequal pay and opportunity: transforming the

unbalanced structure of our economy to meet the challenges of today: climate change,

poverty and the twin crises of economy and economics. International Journal of Green

Economics. 3(2), 107-129.

Khamati-Njenga, B., & Clancy, J. (2006). Concepts and Issues in Gender and Energy.

Energia. http://www.africa-

adapt.net/aa/uploads/Resources/bdb1a217f0ce496c8f898225bf48ce07_Energia-gender-

energy.pdf

Khamis, M., Plush, T., & Zelaya, C. S. (2009). Women's rights in climate change: Using

video as a tool for empowerment in Nepal. Gender & Development. 17(1), 125-135.

Khosla, P. (2007). Selected print resources on women, gender and climate change. Women

& Environments International Magazine. 74, 60-60.

Kitzes, J., Galli, A., Bagliani, M., Barrett, J., Dige, G., Ede, S., et al. (2009). A research

agenda for improving national ecological footprint accounts. Ecological Economics,

68(7), 1991-2007.

Klineberg, S.L, McKeever, M., & Rothenbach, B. (1998). Demographic predictors of

environmental concern. Social Science Quarterly. 79(4), 734-753.

Klinsky, S., & Dowlatabadi, H. (2009). Conceptualizations of justice in climate policy.

Climate Policy. 9(1), 88-108.

Page 18: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Klinsky, S., Sieber, R., & Meredith, T. (2009). Creating local ecological footprints in a

North American context. Local Environment, 14(6), 495-513.

Krauss, C. (1994). Women of color on the frontline. In Bullard, R., ed. Unequal protection:

environmental justice and communities of color. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

256-271.

Kumar-Range, S. (2001). Environmental Management and Disaster Risk Reduction: A

Gender Perspective. Paper prepared for UN DAW Expert Meeting on ‘Environmental

Management and the Mitigation of Natural Disasters: A Gender Perspective’. Ankara,

6-9 November. http://www.unisdr.org/eng/about_isdr/isdr-publications/17-

Gender_Perspectives_Integrating_DRR_CC/Gender_Perspectives_Integrating_DRR_

CC_Good%20Practices.pdf

Kurian, P. (2000). Engendering the Environment? Gender in the World Bank’s

Environmental Policies. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

Kurtz, H E. (2007). Gender and Environmental Justice in Louisiana: Blurring the

boundaries of public and private spheres. Gender, Place and Culture. 14(4). 409-426.

Lambrou, Y. (2007). The gender and development implications of climate change. Gender

and Development. 15(1), 144-147.

Lambrou, Y. & Piana, G. (2006). Gender: The Missing Component of the Response to

Climate Change. USA: Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

http://www.fao.org/sd/dim_pe1/docs/pe1_051001d1_en.pdf

Larson, M. J. (2002). Transforming Power Relationships: building capacity for ecological

security. Gender and Development. 10(2), 92-101.

Lazarus, R. J. (1993). Pursuing Environmental Justice: the distributional effects of

Page 19: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

environmental protection. Northwestern University Law Review. 87(3), 787-857.

Lee, M., & Sanger, T. (2008). Is BC’s Carbon Tax Fair? An Impact Analysis for Different

Income Levels. BC: CCPA.

http://www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/BC_Office_Pu

bs/bc_2008/ccpa_bc_carbontaxfairness.pdf

Leiserowitz, A. (2006). Climate change risk perception and policy preferences. Climatic

Change. 77(1-2), 45-72.

Leu, M., Hanser, S. E., & Knick, S. T. (2008). The human footprint in the west: A large-

scale analysis of anthropogenic impacts. Ecological Applications, 18(5), 1119-1139.

Levi, C. (1992). Gender and environment: the challenge of cross-cutting issues in

development policy planning. Environment and Urbanization. 4(1), 134-149.

Littig, B. (2001). Feminist Perspectives on Environment and Society. Harlow: Prentice Hall.

Liu, Y.Y & Keleher, T. (2009). Green equity toolkit: standards and strategies for advancing

race, gender and economic equity in the green economy. Oakland, CA: Applied

Research Center. http://www.linktv.org/sitecontent/pages/Green_Toolkit_112009.pdf

MacGregor, S. (2009). A stranger silence still: The need for feminist social research on

climate change. Sociological Review. 57, 124-140.

MacGregor, S. (2009). Natural Allies, Perennial Foes? On the trajectories of feminist and

green political thought. Contemporary Political Theory. 8(3), 329-339.

MacGregor, S. (2006). Beyond Mothering Earth: Ecological Citizenship and the Politics of

Care. Vancouver: UBC Press.

MacGregor, S. (2005). The Public, the Private, the Planet, and the Province: Women’s

Quality of Life Activism in Urban Southern Ontario. In Hessing, M., Raglan, R. &

Page 20: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Sandilands, C., eds. This Elusive Land: Women and the Canadian Environment.

Vancouver: UBC Press.

Madre. (2007). Deforestation, climate change, and women's human rights. Madre.

http://www.madre.org/index/press-room-4/news/deforestation-climate-change-and-

womens-human-rights-73.html

Malka, A., Krosnick, J.A, & Langer, G. (2009). The association of knowledge with concern

about global warming. Risk Analysis. 29, 633-647.

Mallory, C. (2006). Ecofeminism and Forest Defense in Cascadia: Gender, Theory and

Radical Activism. Capitalism Nature Socialism. 17(1), 32-49.

Mamouni Limnios, E. A., Ghadouani, A., Schilizzi, S. G. M., & Mazzarol, T. (2009). Giving

the consumer the choice: A methodology for product ecological footprint calculation.

Ecological Economics, 68(10), 2525-2534.

Marshall, B.K. (2004). Gender, Race, and Perceived Environmental Risk. Sociological

Spectrum. 24(4), 453-478.

Masika, R. (2002). Editorial – Gender and climate change. Gender and Development. 10(2),

2-9.

Mazur, L. A., ed. (2010). A pivotal moment: Population, justice, and the environmental

challenge. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

McCright, A. M. (2010). The Effects of Gender on Climate Change Knowledge and

Concern in the American Public. Population and Environment. 32, 66-87.

McMahon, M. (1997). From the ground up: ecofeminism and ecological economics.

Ecological Economics. 20, 163-173.

McStay, J.R. & Dunlap, R.E. (1983). Male-female differences in concern for the

environmental quality. International Journal of Women’s Studies. 6(4), 291-301.

Page 21: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Medel, J., & Parra, M. (2008). Women's work and toxic exposures: An invisible risk.

Epidemiology. 19(1), S213-230.

Mellor, M. (2002). Ecofeminist Economics: Women, Work and the Environment. Women

and Environments International. 54/55, Spring, 7-10.

Mellor, M. (1997). Feminism and Ecology. Washington Square, NY: NYU Press.

Mellor, M. (1992). Breaking the Boundaries: Toward a Feminist Green Socialism. London:

Virago.

Merchant, C. (2005). Radical Ecology: in search of a livable world. London: Routledge.

Merchant, C. (1996). Earthcare: Women and the Environment. London: Routledge.

Metcalf, G. E. (2008). Protecting the Poor with a Carbon Tax. Presented to the Financing for

Development Office. UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs. June 17, 2008.

www.un.org/esa/ffd/events/carbontaxes/MetcalfPresentation.ppt

Mies, M., & Shiva, V. (1993). Ecofeminism. New Jersey: Zed.

Milne, W. (2005). Changing climate, uncertain future: considering rural women in climate

change policies and strategies. Canadian Woman Studies. 24(4), 49-54.

Milne, W. (2003). Women, energy and sustainability: making links, taking action. Canadian

Woman Studies. 23(1), 55-60.

Mitchell, T., Tanner, T., & Lussier, K. (2007). We know what we need. South Asian women

speak out on climate change adaptation. Institute of Development Studies. November.

Mohai, P. (1997). Gender differences in perceptions of most important environmental

problems. Race, Gender & Class. 5, 153-169.

Mohai, P. (1992). Men, women, and the environment. Society and Natural Resources. 5, 1-

19.

Page 22: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Murray, S. & Stewart, M. (2002). Gender, Population and the Environment: finding

common ground for coastal managers. InterCoast. Winter, 2-41.

Mwangi, M. (2007). Gender and Drought Hazards in the Rangelands of the Great Horn of

Africa: is gender equity the only solution? Women & Environments International

Magazine. 74/75. Spring/Summer, 21-24.

Nelson, J. A. (2009). Between a rock and a soft place: Ecological and feminist economics in

policy debates. Ecological Economics. 69(1), 1-8.

Nelson, J. A. (2008). Economists, value judgments, and climate change: A view from

feminist economics. Ecological Economics. 65(3), 441-447.

Nelson, J. A. (1997). Feminism, Ecology, and the Philosophy of Economics. Ecological

Economics. 20(2), 155-162.

Nelson, V., Meadows, K., Cannon, T., Morton, J., & Martin, A. (2002). Uncertain

predictions, invisible impacts, and the need to mainstream gender in climate change

adaptations. Gender and Development. 10(2), 51-59.

Nelson, V., & Stathers, T. (2009). Resilience, power, culture, and climate: A case study

from semi-arid Tanzania, and new research directions. Gender & Development. 17(1),

81-94.

Neumayer, E. & Plumper, T. (2007). The Gendered Nature of Natural Disasters: The

impact of catastrophic events on the gender gap in life expectancy, 1981-2002. Social

Science Research Network.

http://www.gdnonline.org/resources/SSRN_Neumayer_Plumper_GenderedNature_Nat

uralDisasters.pdf

Page 23: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). 2008. Household

Behaviour and the Environment: Reviewing the Evidence.

http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/19/22/42183878.pdf

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). 2008. Promoting

Sustainable Consumption: good practices in OECD countries.

http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/19/22/42183878.pdf

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). 2002. Towards

Sustainable Household Consumption? Trends and Policies in OECD Countries. July.

http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/49/1938984.pdf

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). (2001). Poverty,

environment, gender linkages. DAC Journal. 2(4).

http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/47/46/1960506.pdf

Osei-Agyemang, M. (2007). Temperatures Rising. Women & Environments International

Magazine. 74/75, Spring/Summer, 21-24.

Owens, S. L. (2005). Climate change and health: A project with women of Labrador. Laval

University Thesis. 239 pages.

Oxfam. (2005). The Tsunami’s Impact on Women. Oxfam Briefing Note.

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/conflict_disasters/downloads/bn_tsunami

_women.pdf

Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). (2001). Gender and Natural Disasters. Fact

Sheet. Programme on Women, Health, and Development. Pan-American Health

Organization. Washington, DC.

http://www.paho.org/English/DPM/GPP/GH/genderdisasters.PDF

Pandey, N. (2002). Gender Economies of the Kyoto Protocol. Conservation Ecology. 6(1), 2-

4.

Parikh, J. (2009). Towards a Gender-Sensitive Agenda for Energy, Environment and

Page 24: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Climate Change. United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women. Expert

Group Meeting on ‘The impact of the implementation of the Beijing Delaration and

Platform for Action on the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. UN:

Geneva. November 11-13.

http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/egm/impact_bdpfa/EP10%20-

%20Parikh_final.after%20track.pdf

Parikh, J. (2007). Gender and Climate Change Framework for Analysis, Policy &

Action. UNDP. India. http://data.undp.org.in/Gnder_CC.pdf

Parikh, J. (2002). Mainstreaming gender issue in rural energy. ENERGIA paper prepared

for WSSD.

http://www.unescap.org/esd/rim/documents/IRADe_Energia%20gender%20papers.pd

f

Parikh, J., & Denton, F. (2003). Gender and Climate Change. Tiempo: Climate

Change Newsletter. 47, March.

http://www.tiempocyberclimate.org/portal/archive/issue47/t47a7.htm

Parikh, J.K., Denton, F. (2002). Gender and Climate Change. Report of the event

‘Engendering the Climate Debate,’ COP-8, New Delhi, India.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/COP8_

_exec_summ.pdf

Parikh, J., & Denton, F. (2002). Gender and Climate Change Event at COP8. Integrated

Research and Action for Development (IRADe), ENDA Tiers Monde.

http://www.irade.org/Microsoft%20Word%20-%20cop_8gender_final.pdf

Perkins, E., ed. (1997). Introduction: Women, Ecology and Economics: new models and

theories. Ecological Economics. 20(2), 105-6.

Perkins, E., & Kuiper, E., eds. (2005). Explorations – Feminist Ecological Economics.

Feminist Economics. 11(3), 107-150.

Peterson, V.S., & Runyan, A.S. (2010). Global Gender Issues in the New Millennium.

Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Page 25: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Phipps, S.A. & Burton, P.S. (1998). What’s mine is yours? The influence of male and

female incomes on patterns of household expenditure. Economica. 65(260), 599-613.

Power, M. (2009). Global climate policy and climate justice: A feminist social provisioning

approach. Challenge. 52(1), 47-66.

Rasmussen, R. O. (2009). Gender and generation: Perspectives on ongoing social and

environmental changes in the arctic. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society.

34(3), 524-532.

Regmi, S. (2007). Japanese women's roles in climate change mitigation. Women &

Environments International Magazine. 74, 42-44.

Reyes, R.R. (2002). Gendering responses to El Nino in Peru. Gender and Development.

10(2), 61-69.

Rice, J. (2007). Ecological unequal exchange: International trade and uneven utilization of

environmental space in the world system. Social Forces, 85(3), 1369-1392.

Rocheleau, D, Thomas-Slayter, B., & Wangari, E. (1996). Feminist Political Ecology: global

issues and local experiences. NY: Routledge.

Röhr, U. (2006). Gender and Climate Change. Tiempo: a bulletin on climate and

development. 59, 3-8.

www.tiempocyberclimate.org/portal/archive/pdf/tiempo59high.pdf

Röhr, U. (2006). Gender Relations in International Climate Change Negotiations. Updated

English Version of a contribution to the ISOE Discussion Paper 21 (2005).

http://www.genanet.de/klimaschutz.html?&L=1

Röhr, U. (2005). Gender and Climate Change - a Forgotten Issue? Tiempo: Climate

Page 26: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Change Newsletter. UEA, SEI and IIED.

http://www.tiempocyberclimate.org/newswatch/comment050711.htm

Röhr, U., Albert, G., Hemmati, M., & Pinto, A. (2008). Gender and Climate Change:

Networking for Gender Equality in International Climate Change Negotiations.

GenderCC – women for climate justice. January.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/Report

COP13_web.pdf

Röhr, U., Alber, G., Skutsch, M., Rose, J., & v. d. Heul, R. (2004). Mainstreaming gender

into the climate change regime. COP10. GenderCC Network. December 14.

http://www.genderandenvironment.org/arcangel2/documentos/227.pdfb

Röhr, U, & Hemmati, M. (2008). Solidarity in the Greenhouse: Gender Equality and

Climate Change. In Grower, V., ed. Global Warming and Climate Change. Ten Years

After Kyoto and Still Counting. Oxford: Science Publishers.

Röhr, U., & Hemmati, M. (2005). Why it Makes a Difference: Gender and Climate Change

at COP11/MOP1. Sustainable Energy News. 51, December, 9-10.

Röhr, U., Spitzner, M., Stiefel, E., & Winterfeld, U. (2008). Gender Justice as the Basis for

Sustainable Climate Policies: a feminist background paper. Bonn: German NGO Forum

Environment and Development.

http://www.gendercc.net/fileadmin/inhalte/Dokumente/UNFCCC_conferences/COP14/

Gender_Justice_CC_en-final.pdf

Roy, J. (2009). Climate change and gender: Challenges and opportunities for women's

rights groups. ARROWs for Change. 15(1), 5-6.

http://arrow.org.my/publications/AFC/V15n1.pdf

Roy, M., & Venema, H.D. (2002). Reducing Risk and Vulnerability to Climate Change in

India: The Capabilities Approach. Gender and Development. 10(2), 78-83.

Page 27: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Sadeque, Z. (2010). Climate change and social policy: An introduction. Global Social Policy.

10(1), 3-26.

Salleh, A. (2010). How the Ecological Footprint is Sex-Gendered. Eco-Socialism as Politics.

Dordrecht: Springer. 141-147.

Salleh, A., ed. (2006). Symposium: Ecosocialist-ecofeminist dialogues. Capitalism Nature

and Socialism. 17(4), 32-124.

Salleh, A. (1997). Ecofeminism as Politics. London: Zed Books.

Sandilands, C. (1999). The Good-Natured Feminist: Ecofeminism and the Quest for

Democracy. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Sandilands, C. (1993). On ‘green consumerism’: Environmental privatization and ‘family

values’. Canadian Women’s Studies. 13(3), Spring: 45-7.

Sass, J. (2002). Women, men and environmental change: the gender dimensions of

environmental policies and programs. PRB (Population Reference Bureau) Series.

http://www.prb.org/pdf/WomenMenEnviron_Eng.pdf

Sasvari, A. A. (2010). Changes in climate negotiations: gender equality towards

Copenhagen. Global Social Policy. 10(1), 15-18.

Saurin, J. (1996). Social Ecology and Environmental Change. In Vogler, J., & Imber, M.

The Environment and International Relations. London: Routledge.

Schultz, I & Stieb, I. (2009). Gender aspects of sustainable consumption strategies and

instruments. Institute for Social-Ecological Research (ISOE). Frankfurt/Main, April.

http://www.eupopp.net/docs/isoe-gender_wp1_20090426-endlv.pdf

Page 28: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Schultz, I. (1993). Women and Waste. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism. 4(2), 51-63.

Seager, J. (2006). Noticing gender (or not) in disasters. Geoforum. 37(1), 2-3.

Seager, J. (1993). Earth follies: coming to feminist terms with the global environmental crisis.

NY: Routledge.

Seager, J., & Hartmann, B. (2005). Mainstreaming gender in environmental assessment and

early warning. NY: United Nations Publications.

http://www.unep.org/dewa/products/publications/2005/Mainstreaming_Gender.pdf

Sequeira, N. (2001). Risk management: an alternative perspective in gender analysis. In UN

DAW, Environmental Management and the Mitigation of Natural Disasters: a gender

perspective. Report of the Expert Group Meeting. Ankara, Turkey, November.

http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/env_manage/documents/EP7-2001Nov06.pdf

Serret, Y., & Johnstone, N. (2006). The Distributional Effects of Environmental Policy.

Northamton, MN: Edward Elgar.

Shiva, V. (2005). The Impoverishment of the Environment: women and children last. In

Zimmerman, M.E., Callicot, J.B., Warren, KJ, Klaver, IJ., & Clark, J., eds.

Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology. Pearson Prentice

Hall: Upper Saddle River, pp. 178-193.

Shrader, E., & Delaney, P. (2000). Gender and Post-Disaster Reconstruction: the case of

Hurricane Mitch in Honduras and Nicaragua. World Bank Report. Washington.

http://sheltercentre.org/library/gender-and-post-disaster-reconstruction-case-

hurricane-mitch-honduras-and-nicaragua

Silliman, J. (2009). In search of climate justice: Refuting dubious linkages, affirming rights.

Asian-Pacific Resource & Research Centre for Women. 15(1).

http://www.arrow.org.my/publications/AFC/V15n1.pdf

Page 29: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Skoufias, E., Rabassa, M., Olivieri, S., & Brahmbhatt, M. (2010). The Poverty Impacts of

Climate Change: A Review of the Evidence. Policy Research Working Paper 5622.

Washington, DC: The World Bank.

http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTPREMNET/Resources/EP51_v4.pdf

Skutsch, M. (2004). CDM and LULUCF: what’s in for women? A note for the Gender and

Climate Change Network. Enschede, Netherlands.

http://www.uneca.org/acpc/resources/Gender-and-climate-

change/Skutsch_CDMandLULUCFwhatinitforwomen.pdf

Skutsch, M. (2004). Mainstreaming Gender into the Climate Change Regime (COP10).

Gender and Climate Change. December.

http://www.gencc.interconnection.org/Gender&CCCOP10.pdf

Skutsch, M. (2002). Protocols, treaties, and action: The 'climate change process' viewed

through gender spectacles. Gender and Development. 10(2), 30-39.

Smith, D.C. (2001). Environmentalism, Feminism, and Gender. Sociological Inquiry.

71(3), 314-334.

Smith, M.D. (2007). Just one planet: poverty, justice and climate change. Bourton on

Dunsmore, Rugby: The Schumacher Centre for Technology and Development.

Solomon, I. (2007). Compensating for Climate Change: Principles and Lessons for Equitable

Adaptation Funding. ActionAid USA.

www.actionaid.org/assets/pdf/Compensating%20for%20Climate%20Change.pdf

Somera, N. (2009). Why climate change is a woman's problem. Women in Action. 2, 68-69.

Somma, M., & Tolleson-Rinehart, S. (1997). Tracking the elusive green women.

Political Research Quarterly. 50(1), 153-169.

Page 30: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Sommestad, L. (2007). Women’s leadership for the environment as a human right in Europe,

Eastern Europe and beyond. Keynote paper presented at WAVE conference in

Belgrade, Serbia, October.

http://wecf.eu/cms/download/2007/Kenote_Address_Sommestad-WAVE_2007.pdf

Spring, U. O. (2009). A HUGE Gender Security Approach: Toward Human, Gender, and

Environmental Security. In Facing Global Environmental Change. Hexagon Series on

Human and Environmental Security and Peace. Vol. 4, part IX, 1157-1181.

Stein, R., ed. (2004). New perspectives on environmental justice: gender, sexuality, and

activism. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

Stern, P.C., Dietz, T., & Kalof, L. (1993). Value orientations, gender, and environmental

concern. Environment and Behavior. 25(2), 322-348.

Stevens, C. (2009). Green jobs and women workers: employment, equity, equality.

International Labour Foundation for Sustainable Development (Sustainlabour).

September. Draft Report. http://www.sustainlabour.org/IMG/pdf/women.en.pdf

Stopatic, B. (2007). Women turn up gender equity heat at climate talks Women’s News.

September. http://womensenews.org/story/environment/070925/women-turn-gender-

equity-heat-at-climate-talks

Sturgeon, N. (1997). Ecofeminist Natures: race, gender, feminist theory and political action.

NY: Routledge.

Tandon, N. (2007). Biopolitics, climate change and water security: Impact, vulnerability

and adaptation issues for women. Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity. 73,

4-17.

Page 31: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Taylor, D.E. (1997). American environmentalism: the role of race, class and gender in

shaping activism 1820-1995. Race, Gender and Class. 5(1), 16-52.

Terry, G., ed. (2009). Climate Change and Gender Justice. Oxfam.

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/downloads/wigad_climate/WIGAD_climate_chang

e_gender_justice_book_pap.pdf

Terry, G. (2009). No climate justice without gender justice: An overview of the issues.

Gender and Development. 17(1), 5-18.

Thomas, D.S.G. & Twyman, C. (2005). Equity and Justice in Climate Change Adaptation

Amongst Natural-Resource-Dependent Societies. Global Environmental Change –

Human and Policy Dimensions. 15(2), 115-24.

Turner, T.E., & Brownhill, L. (2007). Climate Justice and Nigerian Women’s Gift to

Humanity. Women & Environments International Magazine. 74, 47-48.

Turner, T.E., & Brownhill, L. (2006). Ecofeminism as gendered, ethnicized class struggle.

Capitalism Nature Socialism. 17(4), 87-95.

United Nations (UN). (2008). Gender perspectives on climate change. 52nd session of the

Commission on the Status of Women. Interactive expert panel. Emerging issues,

trends and new approaches to issues affecting the situation of women or equality

between men and women. February 28.

http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/csw52/issuespapers/Gender%20and%20clim

ate%20change%20paper%20final.pdf

United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). (2007). Human Development Report

2007-2008: ‘Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity in a Divided World’. Palgrave

Macmillan: NY. http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/HDR_20072008_EN_Overview.pdf

Page 32: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP). (2006). Progress report on the

implementation of Governing Council decision 23/11 on gender equality in the field of the

environment. Report of the Executive Director. Nairobi: United Nations.

http://www.unep.org/civil_society/GCSF8/pdfs/gender-gc-24-8-english.pdf

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA). (2009). Global Warming:

Women Matter. March. http://www.uneca.org/sdd/documents/gender-and-climate-

change.pdf

United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR). (2008). Gender

perspectives: Integrating disaster risk reduction into climate change adaptation.

http://www.unisdr.org/eng/about_isdr/isdr-publications/17-

Gender_Perspectives_Integrating_DRR_CC/Gender_Perspectives_Integrating_DRR_

CC_Good%20Practices.pdf

United Nations Women Watch. (n.d.) Global UN Commitments, Resolutions and other

Intergovernmental Outcomes Linking Gender Equality, Climate Change and Sustainable

Development. http://www.un.org/womenwatch/feature/climate_change/#commit

United Nations Women Watch. (n.d.) The Threats of Climate Change are not Neutral.

http://www.un.org/womenwatch/feature/climate_change/#threat

Van Liere, K.D, & Dunlap, R.E. (1980). The social bases of environmental concern. Public

Opinion Quarterly. 44(2), 181-197.

Venkateswaran, S. (1995). Environment, Development, and the Gender Gap. New Delhi:

Sage Publications.

Villagrasa, D. (2002). Kyoto protocol negotiations: Reflections on the role of women.

Gender and Development. 10(2), 40-44.

Page 33: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Vincent, K. (2004). Creating an Index of Social Vulnerability to Climate Change in Africa.

Tyndall Centre for Climate Research, Working Paper No. 56: University of East

Anglia, Norwich, UK. http://www.tyndall.ac.uk/content/creating-index-social-

vulnerability-climate-change-africa

Vinz, D. (2009). Gender and Sustainable Consumption: a German environmental

perspective. European Journal of Women’s Studies. 16(2), 159-179.

Wamukonya, N., & Rukato, H. (2001). Climate change implications for southern Africa: A

gendered perspective. Southern African Gender and Energy Network (SAGEN).

October. http://www.africa-

adapt.net/aa/uploads/Resources/44b4e3b0b34b4924b6872c4044b1d339_gender-

climate-change-southern-africa.pdf

Wamukonya, N., & Skutsch, M. (2002). Gender Angle to the Climate Change Negotiations.

Energy & Environment. 13(1), 115-124.

Warren, K. (2000). Ecofeminist Philosophy: A western perspective on what it is and why it

matters. Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield.

Warren, K. ed. (1997). Ecofeminism: Women, Culture and Nature. Bloomington: Indiana

University Press.

Williamson, T. B., & Watson, D. O. T. (2010). Assessment of community preference

rankings of potential environmental effects of climate change using the method of

paired comparisons. Climatic Change. 99(3), 589-612.

Wilson, J., & Grant, J. L. (2009). Calculating ecological footprints at the municipal level:

What is a reasonable approach for Canada? Local Environment, 14(10), 963-979.

Page 34: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Women and Environments International Magazine. (2007). Women and global climate

change -- A word from the issue editors. Women & Environments International

Magazine, 74, 4-4.

Women for Peace and Ecology. (1996). Solidarity in the Greenhouse. International

Women’s Forum to the UN Climate Summit. 1-2 April 1995, Berlin.

http://www.gendercc.net/policy/conferences/cop1.html

Women’s Climate Caucus. (2005). Global Warming: Women Matter! Draft Statement by

Women at COP11 & COP/MOP1. December 7.

http://www.genanet.de/fileadmin/downloads/themen/Gender_CC_COP11_statement_s

hort_7dec.pdf

Women's Environment and Development Organization (WEDO). (2008). Changing course:

Women unite to transform U.S. climate policy http://www.wedo.org/wp-

content/uploads/changing-the-course-womencc-factsheet.pdf

Women’s Environment and Development Organization. (WEDO). (2008). Final Report:

Gender and Climate Change Workshop 2-3 June 2008. Dakar, Senegal, New York:

WEDO. http://www.wedo.org/wp-content/uploads/finalreport-dakar-workshop-

2008.pdf

Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO). (2007). Changing the

Climate: why women’s perspectives matter? http://www.wedo.org/library/media-

type/pdf/changing-the-climate-why-womens-perspectives-matter

Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO). (2005). Beijing Betrayed.

New York: WEDO. http://www.wedo.org/wp-content/uploads/gmr2005.pdf

Women’s Environment and Development Organization. (WEDO). (n.d.) Gender and

Climate Change in Nepal.

www.wedo.org/learn/campaigns/climatechange/case-study-gender-and-climate-change-

in-nepal

Page 35: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO). (n.d). Gender and

Financing for Climate Change in the Philippines.

www.wedo.org/learn/campaigns/climatechange/new-climate-change-case-study

Women’s Environmental Network and the National Federation of Women’s Institutes.

(2007). Women’s Manifesto on Climate Change.

http://www.wunrn.com/news/2007/09_07/09_10_07/091607_womens_files/091607_wom

ens.pdf

Wong, S. (2009). Climate change and sustainable technology: Re-linking poverty, gender,

and governance. Gender and Development. 17(1), 95-108.

Wood, B.D, & Vedlitz, A. (2007). Issue definition, information processing, and the politics

of global warming. American Journal of Political Science. 51(3), 552-568.

World Conservation Union. (2007). Gender and Climate Change: women as agents of

change. Climate Change Briefing.

http://cmsdata.iucn.org/downloads/climate_change_gender.pdf

Yu, W., Vaneckova, P., Mengersen, K., Pan, X., & Tong, S. (2010). Is the association

between temperature and mortality modified by age, gender and socio-economic

status? Science of the Total Environment. 408(17), 3513-3518.

Zabarenko, D. (2008). Women face tougher impact from climate change. Reuters. 7 May.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0633990420080507

Zein-Eladbin, E. (1996). Development, Gender and the Environment: theoretical or

contextual link. Journal of Economic Issues. 30(4), 926-46.

Page 36: Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011)warming.apps01.yorku.ca/wp-content/uploads/Gender... · Gender and Climate Change – Bibliography (1990-2011) Heather Whiteside

Zelezny, L, Poh-Pheng Chua, P. & Aldrich, C. (2000). Elaborating on gender differences in

environmentalism. Journal of Social Issues. 56, 443-457.

Zimmerman, M.E. (1987). Feminism, deep ecology and environmental ethics.

Environmental Ethics. 9, 21-44.