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Pickering, J., Coolsaet, B., Dawson, N., Suiseeya, K., Inoue, C., & Lim, M. (2022). Rethinking and Upholding Justice and Equity in Transformative Biodiversity Governance. In I. Visseren-Hamakers & M. Kok (Eds.), Transforming Biodiversity Governance (pp. 155-178). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Summary

Justice and equity are fundamental to the complex choices that societies need to make to achieve transformative change (Bennett et al., 2019; IPBES, 2019; Leach et al., 2018; Martin, 2017). Evidence that more socioeconomically unequal societies tend to experience higher rates of biodiversity loss (Holland et al., 2009; IPBES, 2019) suggests that injustice and threats to biodiversity are closely intertwined. Injustice can function as an underlying cause of biodiversity loss, such as where colonial expropriation of Indigenous peoples’ land paves the way for its exploitation (Martinez-Alier, 2002).

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Pickering, J., Coolsaet, B., Dawson, N., Suiseeya, K., Inoue, C., & Lim, M. (2022). Rethinking and Upholding Justice and Equity in Transformative Biodiversity Governance. In I. Visseren-Hamakers & M. Kok (Eds.), Transforming Biodiversity Governance (pp. 155-178). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108856348.009
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