International women’s day 2022 with leading climate justice feminists
Climate liberation is connected to women's liberation. For International Women’s Day 2022, Feminist highlighted this intersection with some of the leading women climate justice activists from @badactivistcollective, @fridaysforfuturemapa, #CodeRedActNow and Indigenous Futures.
The collective rooted in feminism, with members from the global South, (where the affects of climate change are most felt,) built this resource to educate and inspire awareness surrounding the eco-feminism movement. The climate crisis is directly intertwined with the drivers of systemic gender oppression and patriarchal structures. These structures exacerbate human and natural resources leadding the progression of climate change. Below, learn about why the climate crisis is a feminist issue, the role of climate and gender, and the importance of intersectionality and empowering women within the environmental space.
Due to gender inequality, women are disproportionately impacted by climate and ecological breakdowns, such as extreme weather events and food & water scarcity, in comparison to men. This is because gender inequalities affect the allocations of resources, the divisions of labour, representation and power in decision making spaces. Therefore, women face barriers to access to resources, economic independence, and decision making, which has put them in a vulnerable situation in times of crisis. This position means that exposure to climate disasters are more frequent, a staggering 80% of people displaced by climate change are women (UN).
Many of the impacts of the climate crisis put women and girls at increased risk of facing gender based violence and having to drop out of education. In addition, environmental disasters themselves, specially those relaed to water scarcity, can hinder and interrrupt access to sexual and reproductive health services, which are a fundmantal human right.
Oppressive patriarchal control and legacies of colonialism are at the root cause of women and girls placed in a vulnerable position to the climate crisis. This is why we must have equity in our solutions, and for the incredible women leading grassroots communities, environmental movements and creating change, to be represented in decision making, especially indigenous women and women of colour at the frontlines.
Ecofeminism is both political activism and an intellectual critique. It brings together feminism and environmentalism, in which ecofeminism explores the connection between the oppression of women and climate breakdown. Ecofeminists highlight that these are consequences of domination and control from capitalism, of which patriarchy is complicit.
It highlights the normative ‘value dualisms’ upheld by western culture = the concept in which the world is categorised into a binary, which one side deemed superior and one inferior. This is rooted in domination and creates exploitation. For example the normative value dualisms such as ‘human/nature’ and men/other genders (women, non-binary people and other non confirming genders). With the environment, we can see how this binary has led to exploitation of natural elements.
In its early thinking, it analysed women's oppression linkage to domination of nature under colonial and capitalist forces. This body of thought has evolved from its roots of ‘cultural ecofeminism,’ which claimed that women have an essential, biological connection to nature that is universal to all women, which reinforced harmful stereotypes. Today, ecofeminism has developed through a generation of leading activists and academics to understand that many systems of oppression are mutually reinforced including racism and classism.
Ecofeminism now recognises that women’s relationship with the environment is socially constructed. It looks at the social, material and political relationships in society and how an unequal crisis shapes one’s role in climate justice.
Women have a powerful and important body of knowledge and expertise that is crucial to climate crisis mitigation, disaster reduction, and adaptation strategies.
Women leadership in the climate movement extends beyond cisgender and/or heterosexual women. Queer women, trans women, gender non-conforming people, femme-identifying people are all an essential part of the climate conversation.
Women’s climate leadership also extends beyond representation — women need to be in meaningful positions of power, where their voices hold weight.
Indigenous women are safeguarding our biodiversity, and their voices must be heard.
“In times of global disease, the indigenous women who defend life and territory are the cure of the earth. The world that puts money above life is coming to an end and the voices of other worlds are the hope of the future.” - Cura Da Terra (curadaterra.org)
Cura Da Terra seeks to put the voices and stories of indigenous women who defend their bodies, territories and spirits at the centre. You can support their work by :
📺Streaming the documentary on Youtube: Cura Da Terra
🎙Streaming the podcast in Spotify (spanish): Futuros Indígenas
🤳Follow: Futuros Indígenas a collective of primarily women from various indigenous communities in México, Guatemala and Brazil working towards climate justice action.
Gender must be higher on the policy agenda, right alongside substantial climate action. This means widespread access to reproductive services, protections for queer people, expansion of women’s education, and more.
A collective is only as strong as the people that are in it. We are all more effective when we work together to uplift each other’s voices and strive towards equity.
The Collective
THIS RESOURCE GUIDE WAS MADE BY MEMBERS OF A COLLECTIVE FROM BAD ACTIVIST COLLECTIVE, FRIDAYS FOR FUTURE MAPA, #CODEREDACTNOW SERIES AND FUTUROS INDIGENAS.