Articles | Volume 75, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-75-403-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-75-403-2020
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02 Dec 2020
Standard article |  | 02 Dec 2020

Between divine and social justice: emerging climate-justice narratives in Latin American socio-environmental struggles

Celia Ruiz-de-Oña Plaza

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Latest update: 25 Apr 2024
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Short summary
This paper examines the climate justice narratives that are gradually emerging in the cross-border territory of Chiapas–Guatemala, in an area of high socio-environmental conflict. The religious factor is the driving force behind many of these anti-capitalist struggles, especially from the perspective of liberation theology. The case study is a call for the inclusion of religion in climate and environmental justice theories, as a relevant factor in territories with a colonial past.