Most Affected People and Areas, also known by its acronym MAPA, [1] is a term [2] that represents groups and territories disproportionately affected by climate change, such as women, indigenous communities, racial minorities, LGBTQIA+ people, young, older and poorer people and the Global South. [3] The term and concept is interconnected with intersectionality. [4] Countries in Africa and Asia, including India, Sub-Saharan Africa, and coastal communities of Asia, identify as MAPA territories. These communities bear the brunt of carbon emissions and climate change due to the colonization of their land. [5] [6] In particular, with the rise of grassroots movements that had the goal of climate justice - such as Fridays for Future, Ende Gelände or Extinction Rebellion - the connection of these groups in the context of climate justice became more important. [7] The acronym MAPA is preferred by climate activists compared to terms like the Global South, as it better acknowledges the issue of climate justice.
MAPA consists not only of states, but individual communities as well. Countries that are most affected by climate change include South Africa, Indonesia, India, Nigeria, Malaysia, Myanmar, Vietnam, and Thailand. [8] As climate change evolves, so does the number of communities that make up MAPA. The countries listed are not a defined total. Communities that are most affected by climate change include Native Americans, ethnic groups within Africa, and the LGBTQIA+. [9] These communities are often viewed as expendable by their nation's governments and, therefore, are exploited by their governments. These communities often live in areas that contain environmental harms, including air pollution, water pollution, and limited farmland for food supply. These communities often cannot relocate to safer land due to issues such as socio-economic and laws formed by the government. [10]
To view a visual map of MAPA communities click this link. Countries with lighter colors rank lower on the Environmental Performance Index (EPI), which equates to a lower potential for climate resiliency compared to countries with darker colors. These countries are considered MAPA.
In 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) mentioned colonialism for the first time in its Climate Change report. Leading IPCC climate scientists acknowledged that colonialism is both a historic and ongoing driver of the climate crisis. [10] Colonialism is the act of conquering a foreign state and maintaining control through the exploitation of the nation’s citizens and resources. [11] Colonialism is often referred to in a historical context; however, colonialism of communities today is still ongoing.
According to Climate Justice Activists from Friday for Future, who are widely regarded as the group who popularized MAPA, “The countries that benefit the most from industrialization are also the ones that initiated and fueled the climate crisis.” [12] The most successful countries today, including nations in North America and West Europe, are often also those that participated in colonialism and continue to do so today. [13] Since the 18th century, the United States has colonized Native American land, exploiting both Indigenous individuals and their resources. [14] Due to this exploitation, indigenous communities have become a part of MAPA.
The current habitation of MAPA communities can be attributed to colonialism. With control over the people, colonists often pushed European cultures onto the locals, forcing them to either adapt or remove them from their land. In the 19th century, Indigenous communities in the United States were continually pushed westward to the Mid-West, as the land they owned contained valuable natural resources. For example, Citizen Potawatomi philosopher Kyle Powys Whyte has shown that in the United States, colonialism is still ongoing, with the limited Indigenous land being targeted for oil pipelines and uranium mining. [15]
MAPA is recognized by organizations such as Fridays for Future, the United Nations Environmental Programme, the World Economic Forum, the IPCC, and several grassroots organizations. Acknowledging MAPA communities is a primary step that organizations can take to address environmental injustices. A key component of MAPA is intersectionality, which describes the ways that identities based on race, gender, class, etc. intersect with one another. Intersectionality needs to be brought to the forefront of climate action to aid MAPA communities. [3]
Fridays for Future is accredited for popularizing the term MAPA. Fridays for Future is a youth-led movement that began in 2018 by several young climate activists, including Greta Thunberg. [3] With over 14 million members, the organization's goal is to overcome the climate crisis and create a society that lives in harmony with its fellow beings. [16]
Several Fridays for Future activists have begun to advocate for MAPA communities at several climate conferences, including Climate Week in New York City. MAPA activist Mitzi Jonelle Tan stresses that MAPA voices are unheard, not voiceless. [17] Fridays for Future amplifies the voices of MAPA communities from across the globe to organizations that can aid in climate remediation.
MAPA communities have begun to be heard at climate conferences across the globe. The Conference of Parties (COP) is an international climate meeting held each year by the United Nations. At each meeting, government representatives report on progress, make agreements on intermediate goals, and negotiate policy. The most recent COP, COP28, was held in Expo City, Dubai. Nigeria, a MAPA country, tied with China in fourth place for the largest number of registered delegates representing its country for COP28. [18] At the summit, Nigeria and Germany signed a performance agreement to improve Nigeria’s electricity supply. [19] The annual COP meetings have provided a stage for those who identify as MAPA to be given a voice that will be listened to.
Myanmar, a country in Southeast Asia, is considered a MAPA country. It has a population of 54 million and is composed of over 100 ethnic groups. [20] The country gained independence in January 1948 after over a hundred years of British colonial rule. [21] The effects of British colonialism have left Myanmar unsettled, causing economic struggles that are aided by international sanctions by countries such as the United States. Due to economic instability rooted in colonialism, Myanmar has struggled to develop a reliable economy of its own, creating difficulties for fighting climate change.
Myanmar has a tropical climate with long coastlines. Cyclones frequently occur in areas with dense populations in Yangon. [22] The central area of Myanmar is threatened by flooding and droughts, depending on the season. It is considered to be one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to climate change's impacts. [23] In 2021, the United Nations Myanmar Information Management Unit estimated that 21 million people in Myanmar were vulnerable to climate change. [22]
The government of Myanmar has taken incentives against climate change. The Myanmar Climate Change Alliance (2013-2019) was a project funded by the European Union designed to raise awareness about climate change impacts and address them through proper government legislation. [23] The United Nations-Habitat and United Nations Environmental Programme were additional organizations that aided in implementing the policy. Achievements of the project included:
In 2019, Myanmar published the National Climate Change Strategy, the first government publication dedicated to climate resilience. The strategy created an outline for the country's transition to a climate-resilient, low-carbon society focused on preserving its resources for future generations. [24]
Prior to the start of the 2021 Myanmar Civil War, the Myanmar government was fully dedicated to climate remediation for its country. The Myanmar civil war, also called the Burmese Spring Revolution, is an ongoing civil war following insurgencies within the country. [22] Many environmental activists within the country have fled, gone into hiding, or been jailed by the government. Extensive internal displacement of Myanmar citizens has occurred, further forcing citizens to relocate. The extraction of the country’s natural resources has rapidly accelerated since the start of the civil war to finance the military. The ongoing conflict and crisis in Myanmar has further threatened the country’s susceptibility to climate change.
Over the past decade, states and communities affected by climate change have demonstrated resilience. MAPA communities have been participating in efforts to attend international conferences, join IGOs, sign climate treaties, and create emissions reduction goals. Activists from climate advocacy organizations, including Fridays for Future, have taken the stage across the globe to advocate for climate justice. With international organizations, including the United Nations and World Economic Forum, acknowledging MAPA communities, the voices of MAPA continue to grow stronger. MAPA communities are combatting climate change by:
The exploitation of natural resources describes using natural resources, often non-renewable or limited, for economic growth or development. Environmental degradation, human insecurity, and social conflict frequently accompany natural resource exploitation. The impacts of the depletion of natural resources include the decline of economic growth in local areas; however, the abundance of natural resources does not always correlate with a country's material prosperity. Many resource-rich countries, especially in the Global South, face distributional conflicts, where local bureaucracies mismanage or disagree on how resources should be utilized. Foreign industries also contribute to resource exploitation, where raw materials are outsourced from developing countries, with the local communities receiving little profit from the exchange. This is often accompanied by negative effects of economic growth around the affected areas such as inequality and pollution
Environmental racism, ecological racism, or ecological apartheid is a form of racism leading to negative environmental outcomes such as landfills, incinerators, and hazardous waste disposal disproportionately impacting communities of color, violating substantive equality. Internationally, it is also associated with extractivism, which places the environmental burdens of mining, oil extraction, and industrial agriculture upon indigenous peoples and poorer nations largely inhabited by people of color.
Environmental justice or eco-justice, is a social movement to address environmental injustice, which occurs when poor or marginalized communities are harmed by hazardous waste, resource extraction, and other land uses from which they do not benefit. The movement has generated hundreds of studies showing that exposure to environmental harm is inequitably distributed.
What got us talking about women and their correlation to the environment?
Environmental issues in Canada include impacts of climate change, air and water pollution, mining, logging, and the degradation of natural habitats. As one of the world's significant emitters of greenhouse gasses, Canada has the potential to make contributions to curbing climate change with its environmental policies and conservation efforts.
The Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN) is a coalition of indigenous, grassroots environmental justice activists, primarily based in the United States. Group members have represented Native American concerns at international events such as the United Nations Climate Change conferences in Copenhagen (2009) and Paris (2016). IEN organizes an annual conference to discuss proposed goals and projects for the coming year; each year the conference is held in a different indigenous nation. The network emphasizes environmental protection as a form of spiritual activism. IEN received attention in the news as a major organizer of the fight against the Keystone Pipeline and the Dakota Access Pipeline in the Dakota Access Pipeline protests.
The climate movement is a global social movement focused on pressuring governments and industry to take action addressing the causes and impacts of climate change. Environmental non-profit organizations have engaged in significant climate activism since the late 1980s and early 1990s, as they sought to influence the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Climate activism has become increasingly prominent over time, gaining significant momentum during the 2009 Copenhagen Summit and particularly following the signing of the Paris Agreement in 2016.
Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples describes how climate change disproportionately impacts Indigenous peoples around the world when compared to non-Indigenous peoples. These impacts are particularly felt in relation to health, environments, and communities. Some Indigenous scholars of climate change argue that these disproportionately felt impacts are linked to ongoing forms of colonialism. Indigenous peoples found throughout the world have strategies and traditional knowledge to adapt to climate change, through their understanding and preservation of their environment. These knowledge systems can be beneficial for their own community's adaptation to climate change as expressions of self-determination as well as to non-Indigenous communities.
Water protectors are activists, organizers, and cultural workers focused on the defense of the world's water and water systems. The water protector name, analysis and style of activism arose from Indigenous communities in North America during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests at the Standing Rock Reservation, which began with an encampment on LaDonna Brave Bull Allard's land in April, 2016.
Climate change is having serious impacts in the Philippines such as increased frequency and severity of natural disasters, sea level rise, extreme rainfall, resource shortages, and environmental degradation. All of these impacts together have greatly affected the Philippines' agriculture, water, infrastructure, human health, and coastal ecosystems and they are projected to continue having devastating damages to the economy and society of the Philippines.
Licypriya Kangujam is a child environmental activist from India. One of the youngest climate activists globally, she addressed world leaders at the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Madrid, Spain, asking them to take immediate climate action. Licypriya has been campaigning for climate action in India since 2018, to pass new laws to curb India's high pollution levels, and to make climate-change literacy mandatory in schools. She has been regarded as India's Greta Thunberg, though she does not like the usage of this term.
Green grabbing or green colonialism is the foreign land grabbing and appropriation of resources for environmental purposes, resulting in a pattern of unjust development. The purposes of green grabbing are varied; it can be done for ecotourism, conservation of biodiversity or ecosystem services, for carbon emission trading, or for biofuel production. It involves governments, NGOs, and corporations, often working in alliances. Green grabs can result in local residents' displacement from land where they live or make their livelihoods. It is considered to be a subtype of green imperialism.
Climate change vulnerability is a concept that describes how strongly people or ecosystems are likely to be affected by climate change. Its formal definition is the "propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected" by climate change. It can apply to humans and also to natural systems. Issues around the capacity to cope and adapt are also part of this concept. Vulnerability is a component of climate risk. Vulnerability differs within communities and also across societies, regions, and countries. It can increase or decrease over time.
Mitzi Jonelle Tan is a Filipino climate justice activist. She lives in Metro Manila, Philippines.
Tara Houska Zhaabowekwe is a tribal attorney, land defender and climate justice activist.
Evelyn Acham is a climate justice activist from Kampala Uganda and national Ugandan coordinator of the Rise Up Movement, which was founded by her friend and fellow organizer Vanessa Nakate.
Farzana Faruk Jhumu is a climate activist from Fridays for Future, Bangladesh. She is a youth currently living in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Yusuf Baluch is an indigenous Climate justice and Human Rights activist. He started activism after experiencing the first hand impacts of the climate crisis in his community. He is an organizer with School Strike for Climate where he organizes with the regional chapter of Fridays For Future Balochistan.
Adriana Calderón Hernandéz is a youth climate activist and organizer from Mexico. She currently advocates for climate justice with Fridays For Future, Fridays For Future MAPA and Fridays For Future in Mexico. She is one of the co-signers of UNICEF's Children's climate risk index report, part of the delegation of Fridays For Future MAPA that attended COP26, and one of the activists targeting the British multinational bank Standard Chartered and the Mexican state-owned petroleum company Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX).
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