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Transformative justice
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=== Climate justice === {{Main|climate justice}} Some [[climate justice]] approaches promote transformative justice where advocates focus on how vulnerability to climate change reflects various structural injustices in society, such as the exclusion of marginalized groups from decision-making and from climate resilient livelihoods, and that [[climate change adaptation|climate action]] must explicitly address these structural power imbalances. For these advocates, climate change provides an opportunity to reinforce democratic governance at all scales, and drive the achievement of gender equality and social inclusion. At a minimum, priority is placed on ensuring that responses to climate change do not repeat or reinforce existing injustices, which has both distributive justice and procedural justice dimensions. Other conceptions frame climate justice in terms of the need to curb climate change within certain limits, like the [[Paris Agreement|Paris Climate Agreement]] targets of 1.5C, otherwise the impacts of climate change on natural ecosystems will be so severe as to preclude the possibility of justice for many populations.<ref>Cameron, Edward, Tara Shina, and Wendi Bevins. ''Climate Justice: Equity and Justice Informing a New Climate Agreement''. PDF. World Resources Institute and Mary Robinson Foundation, 2013.</ref>
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