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Journal article

Justice and responsibility in climate change adaptation research

Abstract:
We address an ethical challenge in climate change adaptation and global health research. The challenge stems from two pairs of intuitions about justice and responsibility in climate change and health. One pair assigns responsibility for adaptation research to high-income countries given their historical emissions, disproportionate share of resources and capacity to intervene. The other pair assigns responsibility to low- and middle-income countries given their agency, right to self-determination, local authority and legitimacy, and disproportionate burden of climate and health risks. The intuitions create conflicting views: obligation and assistance pull in one direction, and agency and authority pull in another. To resolve the tension, we distinguish two forms of responsibility: (i) adaptation-enabling responsibilities; and (ii) adaptation-enacting responsibilities. The resulting division of labour reflects different forms of justice and aligns with the principle of subsidiarity's core elements, namely: non-abandonment, non-absorption, and cooperation and coordination. We thus propose a framework that ascribes adaptation-enabling responsibilities to high-income countries, including adaptation financing, capacity-building and other forms of support; and adaptation-enacting responsibilities to low- and middle-income countries, including priority-setting in local adaptation research, and creation and implementation of their adaptation plans and policies. Our framework also suggests a third form of responsibility: shared adaptation responsibilities, which are jointly assigned to high-income countries, low- and middle-income countries and agents at multiple levels within them. We conclude that genuine collaboration in adaptation research, where high-income countries enable without dominating and low- and middle-income countries act without being abandoned, will be essential for just and effective adaptation to climate change.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.2471/blt.25.294163

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author


Publisher:
World Health Organization
Journal:
Bulletin of the World Health Organization More from this journal
Volume:
104
Issue:
3
Pages:
184-193
Publication date:
2026-02-03
Acceptance date:
2026-01-12
DOI:
EISSN:
1564-0604
ISSN:
0042-9686
Pmid:
41767985


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
2387145
Local pid:
pubs:2387145
Source identifiers:
3836706
Deposit date:
2026-03-10
ARK identifier:
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