000 01880cam a2200229 4500500
005 20250121075549.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aBucolo, Elisabetta
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aEcological transitions, sustainable development, and social work: What’s at stake when it comes to transforming practices?
260 _c2024.
500 _a4
520 _aFaced with the challenges of climate change, public policies are seeking to adapt societies to its foreseeable and unforeseen impacts. However, vulnerable populations, particularly in at-risk areas, face increased challenges in terms of food security, health, and infrastructure, with limited resources to adapt. These environmental injustices exacerbate the social injustices to which these populations are already exposed. Social workers are called upon to implement adaptation policies, such as eco-gestures, but economic and social vulnerabilities reduce the effectiveness of these efforts as much as the prescriptive and guilt-inducing form of these policies. While vulnerable people are often stigmatized as indifferent to ecological issues, they express a certain distance from dominant narratives and take ownership of environmental issues. This text analyzes the obstacles between collective imaginaries and ecological specificities, explores the place of ecological knowledge in public debate, and concludes with a possible link between environmental justice and epistemic injustices.
690 _asocial work
690 _aenvironmental and epistemic injustices
690 _aecological issues
690 _asocial work
690 _aenvironmental and epistemic injustices
690 _aecological issues
786 0 _nSociographe | o 86 | 2 | 2024-05-07 | p. 39-52 | 1297-6628
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-sociographe-2024-2-page-39?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c493440
_d493440