Friday, December 26, 2025

Sarkin: Climate Adaptation Through Environmental Justice: Comparative Approaches to Enhance the Resilience of Indigenous Peoples and Minority Groups

Jeremy Julian Sarkin
(NOVA Univ. of Lisbon - Law) has published Climate Adaptation Through Environmental Justice: Comparative Approaches to Enhance the Resilience of Indigenous Peoples and Minority Groups (Edward Elgar Publishing 2025). Here's the abstract:

This interdisciplinary socio-legal book explores the effects of climate change on Indigenous Peoples and minority groups. Jeremy Julian Sarkin argues that an integrated approach to deal with climate change, that also incorporates dealing with environmental justice matters, is needed. This is because dealing with environmental injustices must be prioritized in order to achieve the necessary climate change action goals and facilitate climate adaptation for the most vulnerable.

The book investigates the challenges encountered by Indigenous People and minority groups, who face extensive discrimination and often live in deprived areas that are not adequately equipped to deal with the consequences of climate change. By examining the issues concerning climate change and environmental justice in the United States, South Africa and Canada, Sarkin presents various ways to enhance the resilience of those most vulnerable to climate change. By integrating knowledge and methods from a range of disciplines, including the social and natural sciences, Sarkin argues that addressing these issues concurrently and in a unified manner would better aid Indigenous People and minority groups facing these effects.