4.7 Article

Environmental justice in coastal systems: Perspectives from communities confronting change

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102208

关键词

Socio-ecological change; Coastal communities; Empirical equity; Customary management; Papua New Guinea; Legitimacy

资金

  1. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University
  2. ARC Future Fellowship
  3. Australian Research Council [CE140100020, FT160100047]
  4. Pew Charitable Trust
  5. Paul M. Angell Family Foundation
  6. CGIAR Research Program on Fish Agri-Food Systems (FISH)
  7. CGIAR Trust Fund
  8. Australian Research Council [FT160100047] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study reveals the crucial role of communities' perceptions of environmental justice in the socio-ecological changes in the Pacific region, emphasizing the importance of understanding and respecting different people's values and concerns for supporting fair adaptation. The diverse criteria of justice perceptions in different contexts highlight the necessity of eliciting and understanding plural justice perceptions in various environments.
Life in the Pacific is characterised by interconnected, fast and slow socio-ecological change. These changes inevitably involve navigating questions of justice, as they shift who benefits from, owns, and governs resources, and whose claims and rights are recognized. Thus, greater understanding of perceptions of environmental justice within communities will be crucial to support fair adaptation. We contend that an environmental justice approach offers a theoretical foundation to help illuminate key concerns and trade-offs as communities navigate global change. Here, we apply an empirical environmental justice lens to the use and customary management of coastal resources in Papua New Guinea. Through two case studies, we examine perceptions of distributional, procedural and recognitional justice. We find similarities and differences. There were common concerns about the injustice of unequal fishing pressure and destructive methods, but in one case, concerns about people's material needs overrode concerns about non-compliance and unequal costs. In the other case, deliberative decision-making served as a platform for not only negotiating and re-defining the distribution of costs and benefits, but also airing grievances, thereby strengthening recognition of different people's values and concerns. In addition, we find that recognitional aspects of justice, such as respect, can confer or undermine the legitimacy of procedures for governing resources and thus making fair decisions about distribution. The heterogeneity of justice criteria in our cases emphasizes the need to elicit and understand plural justice perceptions in different contexts.

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