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Opinion | Swiss court challenge makes clear climate change is a women’s issue

  • Women experience the greatest impacts of climate change, and these impacts exacerbate pre-existing gender inequalities which threaten their lives and health
  • Despite their unique experiences and being at the forefront of climate action movements, women continue to be absent from climate decision-making processes

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An Afghan girl warms up her hands as she rests from carrying the water in Balucha, Afghanistan, on December 14, 2021. The effects of climate change on women and girls are an increasingly pressing concern, as shown by a recent case before the European Court of Human Rights. Photo: AP
In a landmark legal hearing on March 29, a group of Swiss women argued before the European Court of Human Rights that their government’s failure to sufficiently reduce the country’s greenhouse gas emissions had violated their human rights.
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Presenting their medical records as evidence, the applicants – all of whom are 63 or older – claimed that frequent heatwaves, which are becoming harsher and more intense because of climate change, are interfering with their health and quality of life.
While the Swiss government does not deny climate change can affect health, it holds the opinion that it cannot be specifically tied to the older women’s health. However, there is recent research that suggests the opposite and supports the argument that climate change-induced heatwaves are harming at-risk populations, including older women.
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It is therefore important to understand that the issue of climate change is not “gender neutral” and is increasingly becoming a significant global feminist cause.

In the past decade, women and girls across the world have often been described as bearing the brunt of looming disasters that climate change brings to their communities. Women experience the greatest impacts of climate change, and these impacts exacerbate pre-existing gender inequalities – which exist in both the developed and developing world – and pose unique threats to their livelihoods, health and safety.
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