From heat racism and heat gentrification to urban heat justice in the USA and Europe
Social & Behavioural Sciences
Heat has gained traction as a visible amplifier of unequal vulnerability and adaptive capacity. In this paper, we call for urban climate researchers researching in North America and Europe to distill the relations between unequal heat effects and the legacy of exclusionary urban planning, to point out how injustice is (re)produced through heat-response measures and heat gentrification, and propose new research priorities and policy takeaways grounded in heat justice. We argue that heat-abatement strategies cannot be climate-justice-driven if they prioritize heat management as an apolitical heat response strategy that does not address concurrent patterns of heat racism and emerging heat gentrification.
Heat-responsive strategies such as greening, grey infrastructures, and retrofitting are embedded in gentrification and displacement dynamics, creating what we analyze as emerging processes of “heat gentrification” in the paper. We argue that this process relegates working-class and racialized residents into areas with higher heat exposure, creating enduring landscapes of heat racism and thermal maladaptation through the four pathways described in the figure.
REFERÈNCIA
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