Abstract

Understanding the causality of vulnerability is difficult to do and consequently has received insufficient attention. Root causes of vulnerability needs to be understood and addressed to support adaptation that addresses climate risk and inequality. This paper contributes to this by examining vulnerability from a structural perspective for the case of interstate migrants from West Bengal working as waste pickers in Bangalore’s informal squatter settlements. The research, using qualitative methods, examines complex intersections between a multitude of factors like climate change, agrarian distress, exclusionary patterns of urbanisation and the resultant lack of recognition that shapes and reshapes the vulnerability of a certain group of people. Our findings emphasize the compelling need for vulnerability and adaptation research to focus more on understanding inequality if improving justice is a concern. This focus on justice is insufficiently prioritized in climate change adaptation work.

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