The effects of climate change include increased frequency and intensity of extreme weather events as well as adverse changes in air pollution, increased spread of climate-sensitive disease, and heightened food insecurity. All of these effects are predicted to have a significant impact on global mortality and morbidity, and the available evidence indicates that children are most at risk. In order to protect child health, immediate action to both mitigate further climate change and adapt to existing and expected impacts is required. This chapter reviews the existing literature on the health impacts of climate change on children. It identifies children as key stakeholders in action and decision-making for mitigation and adaptation at a variety of scales. It also highlights how child participation in research, policy, and practice will increase the effectiveness and sustainability of solutions for addressing the health impacts of climate change. The chapter concludes with a call for the climate change community to make a more concerted effort to incorporate the needs and capacities of children into its core agenda.
CITATION STYLE
Towers, B., Ronan, K., & Rashid, M. (2015). Child Health and Survival in a Changing Climate: Vulnerability, Mitigation, and Adaptation. In Geographies of Global Issues: Change and Threat (pp. 1–23). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-95-8_34-1
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