Reflections on Just Transitions: Bringing feminist analysis to the UNFCCC
Women's Environment & Development Organization
Towards a just world that promotes and protects human rights, gender equality and the integrity of the environment.
WEDO, as part of the Women and Gender Constituency (WGC), supports the coordination of a powerhouse group of advocates working to bring feminist analyses of systems change into dialogues and policy-making around just transition happening under the auspices of the United Nations Framework Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC).?
Just two weeks ago, we participated in the second dialogue hosted by the Just Transition Work Programme (JTWP). This dialogue brought together governments and civil society organizations to discuss the forging of holistic, just and equitable transition pathways to decarbonize our economies and societies.
What's on the Agenda?
The workshop was structured across two days of intense dialogue, featuring presentations, thematic breakout sessions, World Café-style discussions, and facilitator-led reflection rounds. The primary focus was navigating the complexities of transitioning away from fossil-fuel-based economies towards more sustainable and equitable models that guarantee positive social and environmental outcomes. Topics that drove the discussions across multiple tables and breakout rooms included:
Civil society was cautiously optimistic about the possibility of finally getting the chance to discuss systemic issues, barriers and opportunities to achieve justice within and between countries.?
A feminist approach
The WGC Just Transition Working Group is made up of many dynamic feminists collectively dreaming, conversing, debunking, writing, advocating and strategizing for a world beyond capitalism, colonialism, racism, patriarchy and extractivism. Building from previous work, and as outlined in a written submission to the UNFCCC , WGC inputs were focused on shaping the conversation around social justice, gender equality and human rights in the context of these transitions, bringing political feminist analysis into what was largely a deeply depoliticized space, and challenging and debunking narratives and systems that perpetuate harm, in particular harms that are capitalist, colonialist and militarized in nature.
We emphasized that a just transition requires:
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Power of Participation
The WGC’s presence in this space was more than a call to include women and gender equality in the just transition and the JTWP. Rather it was about centering true system change in the discussions. We saw our role as feminists to challenge harmful narratives and false solutions, and to bring systems and political analysis to the room. When it came to talking about financing the just transition, we wanted to highlight how unfair international financial and debt-creating structures prevent countries in the global South from being able to create and fund coherent just transition strategies, and to question why there is always money for wars and genocide and never money for climate action and wellbeing-centred policies.?
And we saw Governments respond positively to our interventions, echoing the need to tackle militarism, redirect finance, and to ensure gender equality and human rights if we are to see a truly just transition for all.
What next?
The dialogue provided a valuable platform for exchanging ideas, but as we reflected in our closing remarks, the discussions also revealed significant challenges. Transformational change requires a departure from the systems and structures that have driven both environmental, social and economic injustices within and between countries. This transformational thinking is right now sorely lacking from the JTWP. We left the workshop more committed than ever to continue entering these spaces bravely together, and to speak truth to power wherever we do our advocacy around just transition.
For WEDO, the path forward is clear: we must continue advocating for inclusive, feminist, and justice-centered approaches to these transitions. Only by dismantling current structures of harm can we build a world where people and nature thrive.
Research Associate
1 个月Renuka N.
Interim Director of Insights at Keseb and Advisor to the Trust, Accountability, and Inclusion Collaborative (TAI)
1 个月Leah Eryenyu