Report: A Just(ice) Transition is a Post-Extractive Transition

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The Raúl Rojas open-pit mine in Cerro de Pasco: the pit stretches for 1.2 miles and is over 1,000 feet deep. Credit: Jonathan Chancasana / Adobe Stock
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While the global majority disproportionately suffer the impacts of the climate crisis and the extractivist model, the Global North’s legacy of colonialism, the excess of the world’s wealthiest, and the power of large corporations are responsible for these interrelated crises.

The climate change mitigation commitments thus far made by countries in the Global North are wholly insufficient; not only in terms of emissions reductions, but in their failure to address the root causes of the crisis – systemic and intersecting inequalities and injustices. This failure to take inequality and injustice seriously can be seen in even the most ambitious models of climate mitigation.

This report sets out to explore the social and ecological implications of those models.