Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/31905
Author(s): Camargo, J.
Editor: Walter Leal Filho
Diogo Guedes Vidal
Maria Alzira Pimenta Dinis
Ricardo Cunha Dias
Date: 2022
Title: Is health a just transition issue? cross-cutting multiple crisis: Economic, unemployment, climate and healthcare
Book title/volume: Sustainable policies and practices in energy, environment and health research: Addressing cross-cutting issues
Pages: 609 - 623
Collection title and number: World Sustainability Series
Reference: Camargo, J. (2022). Is health a just transition issue? cross-cutting multiple crisis: Economic, unemployment, climate and healthcare. In. W. Leal Filho, D. G. Vidal, M. A. P. Dinis, & R. C. Dias (Eds.). Sustainable policies and practices in energy, environment and health research: Addressing cross-cutting issues (World Sustainability Series, pp. 609-623). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-86304-3_36
ISBN: 978-3-030-86304-3
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1007/978-3-030-86304-3_36
Keywords: Alteração climática -- Climate change
Climate justice
Healthcare
Just transition
Labour
Abstract: In the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemia, economic crisis is upon society. Unemployment and layoffs coincide with the need for a revolutionary shift in energy systems and the whole productive system. The push for economic recovery designed in most countries does include a response to climate science, though not at the level required (national and regional plans currently have targets that are not in line with keeping temperatures increase under 1.5 ℃ by 2100). Climate Jobs campaigns in different countries have pushed for the creation of political agendas to shift countries’ towards a 45–50% global cut in emissions by 2030, in a framework called “Just Transition”. This framework has been connecting labour and climate, but the focus has been kept mostly out of health issues and the strenuously tested health systems and healthcare workforce, which are a key component of the “care economy”, a central demand of Climate Justice. From the health issues prevalence in labour (in fossil fuel workers in particular) to the increase in health problems connected to the already inevitable impacts of climate change, can Health and healthcare workers become central in the discussion of a new productive system and can healthcare jobs be part of these campaigns and political programs for Just Transition?
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:DINÂMIA'CET-CLI - Capítulos de livros internacionais

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